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The weekend effect in stroke mortality: evidence from Austrian acute care hospitals

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Abstract

Many studies provide evidence for the so-called weekend effect by demonstrating that patients admitted to hospital during weekends show less favourable outcomes such as increased mortality, compared with similar patients admitted during weekdays. The underlying causes for this phenomenon are still discussed controversially. We analysed factors influencing weekend effects in inpatient care for acute stroke in Austria. The study analysed secondary datasets from all 130 public acute care hospitals in Austria between 2010 and 2014 (Austrian DRG Data). The study cohort included 86,399 patient cases admitted with acute ischaemic stroke. By applying multivariate regression analysis, we tested whether patient, treatment or hospital characteristics drove in-hospital mortality on weekends and national holidays. We found that the risk to die after an admission at weekend was significantly higher compared to weekdays, while the number of admissions following stroke was significantly lower. Adjustment for patient, treatment and hospital characteristics substantially reduced the weekend effect in mortality but did not eliminate it. We conclude that the observed weekend effect could be explained either by lower quality of health care or higher severity of stroke admissions at the weekend. In depth analyses supported the hypothesis of higher stroke severity in weekend patients as seen in other studies. While DRG data is useful to analyse stroke treatment and outcomes, adjustment for case mix and severity is essential.

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Fig. 1

Source Austrian DRG-Data 2015; own calculations

Fig. 2

Source Austrian DRG-Data 2010–2014; own calculations

Fig. 3

Source Austrian DRG-Data 2010–2014; own calculations

Fig. 4

Source Austrian Stroke Unit Registry

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Notes

  1. Data on the time that elapses between initial stroke and recurrence are sparse. An Asian study reported an average time interval between first ever and recurrent ischemic stroke of 58,75 months (Zhu et al., 2016). Another German study shows a mean time interval of 697 days (Stahmeyer et al., 2019). We see higher frequencies of patients following the assumed initial stroke for a time period of about 6 months with very short stays or ambulatory care in the dataset. These stays are usually coded as acute stroke due to the absence of a code for follow up care after stroke.

  2. Note, this data cannot be matched on an individual basis to the DRG data set.

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Correspondence to Florian Bachner or Martin Zuba.

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Appendix

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See Tables

Table 3 Results of multilevel linear probability regression analysis with 30-day in-hospital mortality after Stroke as binary dependent variable.

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Table 4 Results of multilevel logit regression analysis with 30-day in-hospital mortality after Stroke as binary dependent variable.

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Table 5 Results of multilevel regression analysis with 30-day in-hospital mortality, admission to stroke unit and average length of stay after stroke.

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Table 6 Comparative data on mortality rates and average length of stay by weekday.

6

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Bachner, F., Zuba, M. The weekend effect in stroke mortality: evidence from Austrian acute care hospitals. Int J Health Econ Manag. 22, 205–236 (2022). https://doi.org/10.1007/s10754-021-09317-2

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