Association Between Spending and Survival of Chronic Heart Failure Across Veterans Affairs Medical Centers.

Category Primary study
JournalJAMA Network Open
Year 2019
Key Points: Question: What is the association between health care spending and survival in patients with chronic heart failure across US Veterans Affairs Medical Centers? FINDINGS: This cohort study of 265 714 patients found that mean annual expenditures varied from $21 300 to $52 800 per patient, and annual survival varied between 81.4% and 88.9%. There was a modest, statistically significant V-shaped association between spending and survival; however, the general association between spending and survival was weak. Meaning: Several Veterans Affairs Medical Centers with high expenditures may be less economically efficient than their peer institutions in producing good health outcomes in their patients with chronic heart failure. This cohort study uses data from more than 265 000 US veterans treated at Veterans Affairs Medical Centers (VAMCs) to compare health care spending for patients with chronic heart failure across VAMCs and to examine the association between spending and survival. Importance: The US Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) provides health care to more than 2 000 000 veterans with chronic cardiovascular disease, yet little is known about how expenditures vary across VA Medical Centers (VAMCs), or whether VAMCs with greater health expenditures are associated with better health outcomes. OBJECTIVES: To compare expenditures for patients with chronic heart failure (CHF) across the nation's VAMCs and examine the association between health care spending and survival. Design, Setting, and Participants: Retrospective cohort study using existing administrative data sets from the VA's Corporate Data Warehouse and each veteran's Medicare enrollment information and claims history for fee-for-service clinicians outside of the VA from 265 714 patients diagnosed with CHF between April 1, 2010, and December 31, 2013, who received care at any of 138 VAMCs or affiliated outpatient clinics nationwide. Patients were followed up through September 30, 2014. Data were analyzed from April 1, 2010, through September 30, 2014. Main Outcomes and Measures: Main outcomes were patient deaths per calendar quarter and aggregate VA costs per calendar quarter. Hierarchical generalized linear models with hospital-level random effects were estimated to calculate both risk-standardized annual health care expenditures and risk-standardized annual survival rates for veterans with CHF at each VAMC. The association between VAMC-level expenditures and survival was then modeled using local and linear regression. RESULTS: Of the 265 714 patients included, 261 132 (98.7%) were male; 224 353 (84.4%) were white; 41 110 (15.5%) were black, Asian, Pacific Islander, American Indian, or Alaskan Native; and 251 (0.1%) did not report race. Mean (SD) age of the patients included was 74 (10) years. Across 138 VAMCs, mean (95% CI) annual expenditures for veterans with CHF varied from $21 300 ($20 300-$22 400) to $52 800 ($49 400-$54 300) per patient, whereas annual survival varied between 81.4% to 88.9%. There was a modest V-shaped association between spending and survival such that adjusted survival was 1.7 percentage points higher at the minimum level of spending compared with the inflection point of $34 100 per year (P =.001) and 1.9 percentage points higher at the maximum level of spending compared with the inflection point (P =.006). Conclusions and Relevance: Despite marked differences in mean annual expenditures per veteran, only a modest association was found between CHF spending and survival at the VAMC level, with slightly higher survival observed at the extremes of the spending range. Hospitals with high expenditures may be less efficient than their peer institutions in producing optimal health outcomes.
Epistemonikos ID: a785e2361c590eb1146ff1aa91e961c14cd9f73c
First added on: Jul 26, 2019