Economic and Safety Implications of Introducing Fast Tracking in Congenital Heart Surgery
Lawrence E, Nguyen K, Morris S, Hollinger I, Graham D, Jenkins K, Bodian C, Lin H, Gelb B, Mittnacht A. Economic and Safety Implications of Introducing Fast Tracking in Congenital Heart Surgery. Circulation Cardiovascular Quality And Outcomes 2013, 6: 201-207. PMID: 23443672, DOI: 10.1161/circoutcomes.111.000066.Peer-Reviewed Original ResearchMeSH KeywordsAdolescentCardiac Surgical ProceduresChildChild MortalityChild, PreschoolCost SavingsCost-Benefit AnalysisFeasibility StudiesFemaleHealth Services ResearchHeart Septal Defects, AtrialHeart Septal Defects, VentricularHospital CostsHospital MortalityHumansInfantInfant MortalityLength of StayMaleOutcome and Process Assessment, Health CarePatient ReadmissionRegression AnalysisRetrospective StudiesTime FactorsTreatment OutcomeUnited StatesYoung AdultConceptsVentricular septal defectMount Sinai Medical CenterAtrial septal defectLength of staySeptal defectMedian lengthVentricular septal defect closureCongenital heart disease surgeryVentricular septal defect patientsCongenital heart surgeryPediatric Health Information SystemSingle-center experienceChildren 2 monthsYears of ageSinai Medical CenterShorter length of stayContemporaneous control groupDisease surgeryHeart surgeryHospital mortalityFast-tracking childrenSurgeryHospital costsMedical CenterReadmission rates
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