Factors Associated With In-Hospital Death Among Pneumonia Patients in US Hospitals From 2016~2019 Academic Article uri icon

abstract

  • Background: Pneumonia is one of the leading causes of hospital admission in the United States1 with a global health burden of about 6.8 million hospitalizations and 1.1 million deaths in patients over 65 years old in 2015. This study aimed to identify possible patient and hospital-related risk factors for in-hospital pneumonia death across United States hospitals. Methods: The National Inpatient Sample was used to identify nationwide pneumonia patients (n=374,766, weighted n=1,873,828) from 2016 to 2019. We examined the characteristics of the study sample and their association with in-hospital death. Multivariate survey logistic regression models were used to identify risk factors. Results: During the study periods, in-hospital death rates continuously decreased (2.45% in 2016 to 2.19% in 2019). Descriptive statistics showed that patient and hospital factors had varied in-hospital death rates. Survey logistic regression results suggested that male, very low income, non-Medicare, government hospitals, rural hospitals, and specific hospital regions were associated with higher in-hospital death rates than their reference groups. Conclusion: Socioeconomic factors, including income and insurance, are associated with pneumonia mortality. Census region, hospital ownership, and rural location are also related to in-hospital mortality. Such findings in underserved, impoverished, and rural areas to identify possible health disparities.

published proceedings

  • International Journal of Health Policy and Management

author list (cited authors)

  • Kim, S. J., Medina, M., Zhong, L., & Chang, J.

citation count

  • 0

publication date

  • July 2023