National Hospital Care Survey Demonstration Projects: Pneumonia Inpatient Hospitalizations and Emergency Department Visits

Posted on by NCHS
Sonja Williams, M.P.H., NCHS Statistician

Questions for Sonja Williams, M.P.H. and Lead Author of “National Hospital Care Survey Demonstration Projects: Pneumonia Inpatient Hospitalizations and Emergency Department Visits

Q: What is a demonstration project as mentioned in the title of your new study?

SW: A demonstration project is a report that exhibits the potential power of an up and coming national survey.  The National Hospital Care Survey is a survey collecting data from a nationally representative sample of hospitals across the United States. This survey data will allow linkage across settings and to outside data sources. Currently, with only a small number of the sampled hospitals reporting, we are not able to make national estimates. This project is an opportunity to tell researchers that although the data are not nationally representative yet, there are great insights that can be gleaned from the data we currently have.


Q: Why did you produce this report if the statistical results are not nationally representative?

SW: It is the dramatic potential of the National Hospital Care Survey data that motivated me to write this report. I want the U.S. Public Health Community to have information that will help them in their important work throughout America, and this survey could provide that. Although not yet nationally representative, we have millions of records that can demonstrate the power of the survey and still give us insight into what is happening in hospitals in the United States. This report also gives us an opportunity to demonstrate the ability to link to outside sources, such as the National Death Index, and examine what happens to patients after they leave the hospital.


Q: What type of trend data do you have on pneumonia hospitalizations and emergency room visits?

SW: We have extensive trend data from a number of surveys at the National Center for Health Statistics. For example, the National Hospital Discharge Survey, which is the predecessor to the National Hospital Care Survey, has trend data on pneumonia hospitalizations dating from the 1970s all the way to 2010—the last year the National Hospital Discharge Survey was fielded. For emergency room visits, we have trend data dating from 1992 to 2015 through the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey. Once nationally representative, the National Hospital Care Survey will be able to produce trend data and possibly create trends for linked data.    


Q: Was there a finding in your new study that really surprised you?

SW: One finding that surprised me was that most pneumonia patients who died within 30 days after their discharge from the hospital, died of something other than pneumonia.

We were able to link our data to the National Death Index (NDI) and examine 30-, 60-, and 90 day- mortality along with looking at cause of death and average age of death after pneumonia hospitalizations. It was interesting to see that most patients lived past 90 days post-discharge, but of those who died, the number one cause of death was malignant neoplasm of an unspecified part of the bronchus or lung. Pneumonia was only the underlying cause of death for 5% of the patients who were hospitalized for pneumonia. Currently, with only a small number of the sampled hospitals reporting, we are not able to make national estimates.


Q: What differences or similarities did you see between or among various demographic groups in this analysis?

SW: There were some interesting differences among demographic groups. For example, there were several age distribution differences.

Among the records in our survey, most hospitalizations for pneumonia were aged 65 and over, while most of those being seen in the emergency department were under age 15. For those inpatients that stayed in the ICU, their average length of stay increased by 50% overall. Also, the gap between the average length of stay with and without time spent in the ICU, seemed to be the largest among those under age 15. For those under 15, their average length of stay was 3.1 days, while for the same age group—among those who stayed in the ICU—their average length of stay was 7.7 days. This is nearly a 5-day difference. The gap between ICU and non-ICU involved hospitalizations for other age groups did not have such a wide difference. Currently, with only a small number of the sampled hospitals reporting, we are not able to make national estimates.


Q: What would you say is the take-home message of this report?

SW: I think the real take-home message of this report is that once nationally representative, the National Hospital Care Survey will present an opportunity to look at hospital utilization—along with hospital care—across settings in the United States. The ability to link to outside sources of data, demonstrated in our current linkage to the National Death Index, will allow researchers to explore underlying cause of death and mortality details not previously available. This ability to link will also allow researchers to explore how surrounding social and economic factors can contribute to outcomes of hospital stays through linkage to other data sources such as U.S Census Bureau data. Also, the ability to look at key items of interest in greater detail, such as discharge status, and tracking ICU-involved hospitalizations, will give us a unique view into the care being conducted in hospitals across the United States.


Posted on by NCHS
Page last reviewed: August 24, 2018
Page last updated: August 24, 2018