Expertise and infrastructure capacity impacts acute coronary syndrome outcomes

C.M. Astley, I. Ranasinghe, D. Brieger, C.J. Ellis, J. Redfern, T. Briffa, B. Aliprandi-Costa, T. Howell, S.G. Bloomer, G. Gamble, A. Driscoll, K.K. Hyun, C.J. Hammett, D.P. Chew

Research output: Contribution to journalArticleResearchpeer-review

3 Citations (Scopus)

Abstract

Objective. 

Effective translation of evidence to practice may depend on systems of care characteristics within the health service. The present study evaluated associations between hospital expertise and infrastructure capacity and acute coronary syndrome (ACS) care as part of the SNAPSHOT ACS registry. 

Methods:

A survey collected hospital systems and process data and our analysis developed a score to assess hospital infrastructure and expertise capacity. Patient-level data from a registry of 4387 suspected ACS patients enrolled over a 2-week period were used and associations with guideline care and in-hospital and 6-, 12-and 18-month outcomes were measured. 

Results:

Of 375 participating hospitals, 348 (92.8%) were included in the analysis. Higher expertise was associated with increased coronary angiograms (440/1329; 33.1%), 580/1656 (35.0%) and 609/1402 (43.4%) for low, intermediate and high expertise capacity respectively; P < 0.001) and the prescription of guideline therapies observed a tendency for an association with (531/1329 (40.0%), 733/1656 (44.3%) and 603/1402 (43.0%) for low, intermediate and high expertise capacity respectively; P = 0.056), but not rehabilitation (474/1329 (35.7%), 603/1656 (36.4%) and 535/1402 (38.2%) for low, intermediate and high expertise capacity respectively; P = 0.377). Higher expertise capacity was associated with a lower incidence of major adverse events (152/1329 (11.4%), 142/1656 (8.6%) and 149/149 (10.6%) for low, intermediate and high expertise capacity respectively; P = 0.026), as well as adjusted mortality within 18 months (low vs intermediate expertise capacity: odds ratio (OR) 0.79, 95%confidence interval (CI) 0.58-1.08, P = 0.153; intermediate vs high expertise capacity: OR 0.64, 95%CI 0.48-0.86, P = 0.003). 

Conclusions:

Both higher-level expertise in decision making and infrastructure capacity are associated with improved evidence translation and survival over 18 months of an ACS event and have clear healthcare design and policy implications.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)277-285
Number of pages9
JournalAustralian Health Review
Volume42
Issue number3
DOIs
Publication statusPublished - 2018
Externally publishedYes

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