Exploring COVID-19 census burdens by US hospital characteristics: Implications of quality reporting at rural and critical access hospitals

J Rural Health. 2024 Jun;40(3):485-490. doi: 10.1111/jrh.12841. Epub 2024 May 1.

Abstract

Purpose: By assessing longitudinal associations between COVID-19 census burdens and hospital characteristics, such as bed size and critical access status, we can explore whether pandemic-era hospital quality benchmarking requires risk-adjustment or stratification for hospital-level characteristics.

Methods: We used hospital-level data from the US Department of Health and Human Services including weekly total hospital and COVID-19 censuses from August 2020 to August 2023 and the 2021 American Hospital Association survey. We calculated weekly percentages of total adult hospital beds containing COVID-19 patients. We then calculated the number of weeks each hospital spent at Extreme (≥20% of beds occupied by COVID-19 patients), High (10%-19%), Moderate (5%-9%), and Low (<5%) COVID-19 stress. We assessed longitudinal hospital-level COVID-19 stress, stratified by 15 hospital characteristics including joint commission accreditation, bed size, teaching status, critical access hospital status, and core-based statistical area (CBSA) rurality.

Findings: Among n = 2582 US hospitals, the median(IQR) weekly percentage of hospital capacity occupied by COVID-19 patients was 6.7%(3.6%-13.0%). 80,268/213,383 (38%) hospital-weeks experienced Low COVID-19 census stress, 28% Moderate stress, 22% High stress, and 12% Extreme stress. COVID-19 census burdens were similar across most hospital characteristics, but were significantly greater for critical access hospitals.

Conclusions: US hospitals experienced similar COVID-19 census burdens across multiple institutional characteristics. Evidence-based inclusion of pandemic-era outcomes in hospital quality reporting may not require significant hospital-level risk-adjustment or stratification, with the exception of rural or critical access hospitals, which experienced differentially greater COVID-19 census burdens and may merit hospital-level risk-adjustment considerations.

Keywords: COVID‐19; census; critical access hospital; quality; risk adjustment.

MeSH terms

  • Benchmarking
  • COVID-19* / epidemiology
  • Censuses*
  • Health Services Accessibility / standards
  • Health Services Accessibility / statistics & numerical data
  • Hospital Bed Capacity / statistics & numerical data
  • Hospitals, Rural* / standards
  • Hospitals, Rural* / statistics & numerical data
  • Humans
  • Pandemics
  • Quality of Health Care / standards
  • Quality of Health Care / statistics & numerical data
  • SARS-CoV-2*
  • United States / epidemiology