XML Feed for RxPG News   Add RxPG News Headlines to My Yahoo!   Javascript Syndication for RxPG News

Research Health World General
 
  Home
 
 Latest Research
 Cancer
 Psychiatry
 Genetics
 Surgery
 Aging
 Ophthalmology
 Gynaecology
 Neurosciences
 Pharmacology
 Cardiology
 Obstetrics
 Infectious Diseases
 Respiratory Medicine
 Pathology
 Endocrinology
 Immunology
 Nephrology
 Gastroenterology
 Biotechnology
 Radiology
 Dermatology
 Microbiology
 Haematology
 Dental
 ENT
 Environment
 Embryology
 Orthopedics
 Metabolism
 Anaethesia
 Paediatrics
 Public Health
 Urology
 Musculoskeletal
 Clinical Trials
 Physiology
 Biochemistry
 Cytology
 Traumatology
 Rheumatology
 
 Medical News
 Health
 Opinion
 Healthcare
  UK
  USA
   Medicare
  World
  India
  South Africa
  New Zealand
  Australia
  Canada Healthcare
  China Healthcare
  Africa
 Professionals
 Launch
 Awards & Prizes
 
 Careers
 Medical
 Nursing
 Dental
 
 Special Topics
 Euthanasia
 Ethics
 Evolution
 Odd Medical News
 Feature
 
 World News
 Tsunami
 Epidemics
 Climate
 Business
Search

Last Updated: Aug 19th, 2006 - 22:18:38

USA Channel
subscribe to USA newsletter

Medical News : Healthcare : USA

   DISCUSS   |   EMAIL   |   PRINT
Impact of state CON programs on heart attack treatment
May 10, 2006, 13:01, Reviewed by: Dr. Sanjukta Acharya


"States with CON regulations tend to have fewer hospitals performing high-tech procedures, thus consolidating the delivery of such services and creating higher volume programs. Hospitals that do more of a certain procedure to treat a certain diagnosis, will, on average, do better than hospitals that do fewer of the procedure,"


 
People who have heart attacks are about 15 percent less likely to be treated with bypass surgery or angioplasty within the first few days of the incident in states with certificate of need (CON) regulatory programs. However, these patients are no more likely to experience adverse events, such as death, than patients who had heart attacks but were treated within the first days in states without CON.

CON programs involve state-enacted regulations that seek to limit unnecessary expansion of medical services. The study also showed that increased CON stringency is associated with lower use of the two procedures but without a negative impact on survival.

"The study implies that certificate of need programs, which require hospitals to obtain prior approval for establishing high-cost services, limit the growth of these services. In spite of limiting the diffusion of these services, CON regulations did not adversely affect patients," said Gary Rosenthal, M.D., the study's senior investigator and professor of internal medicine in the UI Roy J. and Lucille A. Caver College of Medicine. Rosenthal also is director of the Center for Research in the Implementation of Innovative Strategies in Practice at the VA Iowa City Health Care System.

The study involved a review of the administrative records of 1,139,792 Medicare beneficiaries age 68 and older who had heart attacks and had been admitted to 4,587 hospitals in the United States between 2000 and 2003.

Certificate of need became optional for states in the mid-1980s. During the study, 27 states, including the District of Columbia, had CON regulations for open-heart surgery.

The authors also rated the stringency of the state CON programs, based on the scope of services covered by the CON regulations and the review process hospitals experience when requesting authorization to establish a new program. Using this rating, three states had high CON stringency, eight states had moderate CON stringency and 16 states, including Iowa, had low CON stringency.

"The findings indicate that the more stringent the CON program, the lower the use of bypass surgery and angioplasty for these patients, yet death rates remained the same as in states with less stringent CON or states without CON," explained the study's lead author Ioana Popescu, M.D., a Quality Scholar with the VA Iowa City Health Care System and UI fellow in internal medicine.

Rosenthal and Popescu noted that there still is pressure on states to remove CON regulations because of claims that it limits free competition.

"A problem for policy makers is there haven't been enough studies on the impact of certificate of need programs on quality of care and how well patients do," Rosenthal said. "There may still be an important role for regulatory policy at the state level to ensure services are not unnecessarily duplicated and to control quality of care."

"States with CON regulations tend to have fewer hospitals performing high-tech procedures, thus consolidating the delivery of such services and creating higher volume programs. Hospitals that do more of a certain procedure to treat a certain diagnosis, will, on average, do better than hospitals that do fewer of the procedure," Popescu said.

Rosenthal said that maintaining higher volume per institution may be particularly important for bypass surgery, which is being used less frequently overall in the United States because more patients are being treated with angioplasty.
 

- These findings appear in a University of Iowa and Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) study published in the May 10 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.
 

www.uiowa.edu

 
Subscribe to USA Newsletter
E-mail Address:

 

The study was supported in part by a VA grant and also included Mary Vaughan-Sarrazin, Ph.D., UI adjunct assistant professor in internal medicine and a health services research specialist with the VA Iowa City Health Care System.

A previous UI and VA study led by Rosenthal found that patients being treated with bypass surgery, regardless of cause (not just limited to heart attack patients), were 20 percent less likely to die in states with CON than in state without the program. That study also found that hospitals in states with CON performed more bypasses, regardless of causes.

University of Iowa Health Care describes the partnership between the UI Roy J. and Lucille A. Carver College of Medicine and UI Hospitals and Clinics and the patient care, medical education and research programs and services they provide. Visit UI Health Care online at www.uihealthcare.com.


Related USA News

Profiles of serial killers have limitations
Concerns over abortion law in the US state of South Dakota
Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Opens the National Center for X-ray Tomography (NCXT)
States That Easily Grant Immunization Exemptions Have Higher Incidence Of Whooping Cough
Study calls for 39 percent more family physicians in USA
FDA safety alerts for automated external defibrillators occur frequently
Hospital Performance Results Do Not Always Reflect Patient Outcomes
US suicide rate drops as antidepressant prescriptions rise
FDA Counterfeit Drug Task Force's recommendations adopted
Rapid Approval of Gardasil Marks Major Advancement in Public Health


For any corrections of factual information, to contact the editors or to send any medical news or health news press releases, use feedback form

Top of Page

 

© Copyright 2004 onwards by RxPG Medical Solutions Private Limited
Contact Us