Yusuke Tsugawa,
Anupam B Jena, Ruth L Newhouse, E John Orav, Ashish K Jha, K T Ki. Quality of care delivered by general
internists in US hospitals who graduated from foreign versus US medical
schools: observational study BMJ
2017;356:j273 https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.j273 (Published 03 February 2017)
Abstract
Objective To determine whether patient outcomes differ
between general internists who graduated from a medical school outside the
United States and those who graduated from a US medical school.
Design Observational study.
Setting Medicare, USA.
Participants 20% national sample of data for Medicare
fee-for-service beneficiaries aged 65 years or older admitted to hospital with
a medical condition in 2011-14 and treated by international or US medical
graduates who were general internists. The study sample for mortality analysis
included 1 215 490 admissions to the hospital treated by 44 227 general
internists.
Main outcome measures Patients’ 30 day mortality and
readmission rates, and costs of care per hospital admission, with adjustment
for patient and physician characteristics and hospital fixed effects
(effectively comparing physicians within the same hospital). As a sensitivity
analysis, we focused on physicians who specialize in the care of patients
admitted to hospital (“hospitalists”), who typically work in shifts and whose
patients are plausibly quasi-randomized based on the physicians’ work
schedules.
Results Compared with patients treated by US graduates,
patients treated by international graduates had slightly more chronic
conditions. After adjustment for patient and physician characteristics and
hospital fixed effects, patients treated by international graduates had lower
mortality (adjusted mortality 11.2% v 11.6%; adjusted odds ratio 0.95, 95%
confidence interval 0.93 to 0.96; P<0.001) and slightly higher costs of care
per admission (adjusted costs $1145 (£950; €1080) v $1098; adjusted difference
$47, 95% confidence interval $39 to $55, P<0.001). Readmission rates did not
differ between the two types of graduates. Similar differences in patient
outcomes were observed among hospitalists. Differences in patient mortality
were not explained by differences in length of stay, spending level, or
discharge location.
Conclusions Data on older Medicare patients admitted to
hospital in the US showed that patients treated by international graduates had
lower mortality than patients cared for by US graduates.
Courtesy of: http://www.medscape.com/viewarticle/875356?
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