Better primary
care could prevent 4 million hospitalizations
Newswise — More than 4
million hospitalizations potentially could be
prevented each year by improving the quality of
primary care, enhancing patients' access to
effective treatments, and getting more Americans
to adopt healthy behaviors, according to the
latest News and Numbers from the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality. Billions of
dollars could also be saved by avoiding the need
to hospitalize patients for health problems
that, in most cases, can be prevented or if
already present, kept stable by high-quality
care in physicians’ offices.
These potential savings are
based on AHRQ’s estimate that hospitals spent
about $29 billion in 2004 on care for 12
potentially preventable conditions in adults:
• uncontrolled diabetes without complications
($201 million);
• short-term diabetes complications such as
hypoglycemia ($764 million);
• long-term diabetes complications such as
kidney damage ($2.6 billion) or diabetes related
foot or leg amputations;
• angina not involving a procedure ($435
million);
• congestive heart failure ($8.3 billion);
• high blood pressure ($509 million);
• asthma ($1.4 billion);
• chronic obstructive pulmonary disease ($3.4
billion);
• bacterial pneumonia ($7 billion);
• dehydration ($1.4 billion); and
• urinary tract infection ($2 billion).
The estimates are also
based on spending for four pediatric conditions
:
• short-term diabetes
complications ($61 million);
• asthma ($326 million);
• gastroenteritis ($241 million); and
• urinary tract infection ($109 million).
Over the 7-year period from 1997 to 2004,
hospital costs for these potentially preventable
conditions increased by nearly one-third (31
percent), adjusted for inflation, while hospital
admissions for these conditions increased by
only 3 percent.
This AHRQ News & Numbers summary is based on
data in Trends in Potentially Preventable
Hospitalizations among Adults and Children,
1997-2004. The report uses statistics from the
Nationwide Inpatient Sample, a database of
hospital inpatient stays that is nationally
representative of inpatient stays in all
short-term, non-Federal hospitals. The data are
drawn from hospitals that comprise 90 percent of
all discharges in the United States and include
all patients, regardless of insurance type, as
well as the uninsured.