Background
Increasing physician case volumes are documented to reduce costs and improve outcomes for many surgical procedures but not
for medical conditions such as pneumonia that consume significant health care resources.
Objective
This study explored the association between physicians’ inpatient pneumonia case volume and cost per discharge.
Design
The design was a retrospective, population-based, cross-sectional study, using National Health Insurance administrative claims
data.
Setting
The setting was Taiwan.
Participants
The participants were a universal sample of 270,002 adult, acute pneumonia hospitalizations, during 2002–2004, excluding transferred
cases and readmissions.
Measurements
Hierarchical linear regression modeling was used to examine the association of physician’s volume (three volume groups, designed
to classify patients into approximately equal sized groups) with cost, adjusting for hospital random effects, case severity,
physician demographics and specialty, hospital characteristics, and geographic location.
Results
Mean cost was NT2,255 (US2,255 (US1 = NT$33 in 2004) for low-volume physicians (≤100 cases) and NT$33 in 2004) for low-volume physicians (≤100 cases) and NT1,707 for high-volume physicians
(≥316 cases). The adjusted patient costs for low-volume physicians were higher (US264 and US264 and US235 than high- and medium-volume
physicians, respectively; both P < .001), with no difference between high- and medium-volume physicians. High-volume physicians had lower in-hospital mortality
and 14-day readmission rates than low-volume physicians.
Conclusions
Data support an inverse volume–cost relationship for pneumonia care. Decision processes and clinical care of high-volume physicians
versus low-volume physicians should be studied to develop effective care algorithms to improve pneumonia outcomes and reduce
costs.
KEY WORDS pneumonia - volume–outcome - costs