It's a sad fact that persons with MS have to be hospitalized at times. There are some aspects of a hospital stay that are good to know about in advance. If you can keep alert while hospitalized and pay attention to just who is treating you and with what, you are far better off. This is difficult to do if you're groggy from an anesthetic or feeling so sick that you've stopped noticing much of anything, but this article points out that a change in the interns' rotations can make a difference in the quality of your care.
From NEJM Journal Watch, December 7, 2016:
End-of-Rotation House Staff Changes Linked to Increased Patient Mortality
By Amy Orciari Herman
Edited by David G. Fairchild, MD, MPH, and Lorenzo Di Francesco, MD, FACP, FHM
Resident and intern service changes are associated with increased mortality among hospitalized patients, suggests a retrospective cohort study in JAMA.
Researchers studied 230,000 patient discharges from 10 university-affiliated Veterans Affairs hospitals between 2008 and 2014. Patients were allotted to the "transition" group if they were admitted before an end-of-rotation transition (resident or intern) and were discharged or died within 7 days post-transition. The control group included all other discharges.
The primary outcome — in-hospital mortality — was significantly greater for intern-only transitions than controls (3.5% vs. 2.0%), and for intern-plus-resident transitions than controls (4.0% vs. 2.1%); resident-only transitions were not associated with in-hospital mortality. In addition, 30- and 90-day mortality rates were significantly higher for all types of transitions relative to controls. In an alternative analysis that looked at comparable patient populations, there was no significant difference in patients admitted before transition and control patients admitted in the middle of the rotation.
The authors say, "These results showed that end-of-rotation transitions in care were associated with increased mortality; however, this increased risk may be limited to longer stay, complex patients with greater comorbidities or those discharged soon after the transition."
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