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Dive into the research topics where Marion R. Sills is active.

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Featured researches published by Marion R. Sills.


JAMA | 2011

Hospital-Level Compliance With Asthma Care Quality Measures at Children's Hospitals and Subsequent Asthma-Related Outcomes

Rustin B. Morse; Matthew Hall; Evan S. Fieldston; Gerd McGwire; Melanie Anspacher; Marion R. Sills; Kristi Williams; Naomi Oyemwense; Keith J. Mann; Harold K. Simon; Samir S. Shah

CONTEXT The Childrens Asthma Care (CAC) measure set evaluates whether children admitted to hospitals with asthma receive relievers (CAC-1) and systemic corticosteroids (CAC-2) and whether they are discharged with a home management plan of care (CAC-3). It is the only Joint Commission core measure applicable to evaluate the quality of care for hospitalized children. OBJECTIVES To evaluate longitudinal trends in CAC measure compliance and to determine if an association exists between compliance and outcomes. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PATIENTS Cross-sectional study using administrative data and CAC compliance data for 30 US childrens hospitals. A total of 37,267 children admitted with asthma between January 1, 2008, and September 30, 2010, with follow-up through December 31, 2010, accounted for 45,499 hospital admissions. Hospital-level CAC measure compliance data were obtained from the National Association of Childrens Hospitals and Related Institutions. Readmission and postdischarge emergency department (ED) utilization data were obtained from the Pediatric Health Information System. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES Childrens Asthma Care measure compliance trends; postdischarge ED utilization and asthma-related readmission rates at 7, 30, and 90 days. RESULTS The minimum quarterly CAC-1 and CAC-2 measure compliance rates reported by any hospital were 97.1% and 89.5%, respectively. Individual hospital CAC-2 compliance exceeded 95% for 97.9% of the quarters. Lack of variability in CAC-1 and CAC-2 compliance precluded examination of their association with the specified outcomes. Mean CAC-3 compliance was 40.6% (95% CI, 34.1%-47.1%) and 72.9% (95% CI, 68.8%-76.9%) for the initial and final 3 quarters of the study, respectively. The mean 7-, 30-, and 90-day postdischarge ED utilization rates were 1.5% (95% CI, 1.3%-1.6%), 4.3% (95% CI, 4.0%-4.5%), and 11.1% (95% CI, 10.5%-11.7%) and the mean quarterly 7-, 30-, and 90-day readmission rates were 1.4% (95% CI, 1.2%-1.6%), 3.1% (95% CI, 2.8%-3.3%), and 7.6% (95% CI, 7.2%-8.1%). There was no significant association between overall CAC-3 compliance (odds ratio [OR] for 5% improvement in compliance) and postdischarge ED utilization rates at 7 days (OR, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.98-1.02), 30 days (OR, 0.97; 95% CI, 0.90-1.04), and 90 days (OR, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.77-1.18). In addition, there was no significant association between overall CAC-3 compliance (OR for 5% improvement in compliance) and readmission rates at 7 days (OR, 1.00; 95% CI, 0.99-1.02), 30 days (OR, 0.99; 95% CI, 0.96-1.02), and 90 days (OR, 1.01; 95% CI, 0.90-1.12). CONCLUSION Among children admitted to pediatric hospitals for asthma, there was high hospital-level compliance with CAC-1 and CAC-2 quality measures and moderate compliance with the CAC-3 measure but no association between CAC-3 compliance and subsequent ED visits and asthma-related readmissions.


Annals of Emergency Medicine | 2011

Emergency Department Crowding Is Associated With Decreased Quality of Care for Children With Acute Asthma

Marion R. Sills; Diane L. Fairclough; Daksha Ranade; Michael G. Kahn

STUDY OBJECTIVE We seek to determine which dimensions of quality of care are most influenced by emergency department (ED) crowding for patients with acute asthma exacerbations. METHODS This cross-sectional study with retrospective data collection included patients aged 2 to 21 years treated for acute asthma during November 2007 to October 2008 at a childrens hospital ED. We studied 3 processes of care-asthma score, β-agonist, and corticosteroid administration-and 9 quality measures representing 3 quality dimensions: timeliness (1-hour receipt of each process), effectiveness (receipt/nonreceipt of each process), and equity (language, identified primary care provider, and insurance). Primary independent variables were 2 crowding measures: ED occupancy and number waiting to see an attending-level physician. Models were adjusted for age, language, insurance, primary care access, triage level, ambulance arrival, oximetry, smoke exposure, and time of day. For timeliness and effectiveness quality measures, we calculated the adjusted risk of each quality measure at 5 percentiles of crowding for each crowding measure and assessed the significance of the adjusted relative interquartile risk ratios. For equity measures, we tested their role as moderators of the crowding-quality models. RESULTS The asthma population included 927 patients. Timeliness and effectiveness quality measures showed an inverse, dose-related association with crowding, an effect not moderated by equity measures. Patients were 52% to 74% less likely to receive timely care and were 9% to 14% less likely to receive effective care when each crowding measure was at the 75th rather than at the 25th percentile (P<.05). CONCLUSION ED crowding is associated with decreased timeliness and effectiveness-but not equity-of care for children with acute asthma.


Academic Emergency Medicine | 2011

Emergency department crowding is associated with decreased quality of analgesia delivery for children with pain related to acute, isolated, long-bone fractures.

Marion R. Sills; Diane L. Fairclough; Daksha Ranade; Michael S. Mitchell; Michael G. Kahn

OBJECTIVES The authors sought to determine which quality measures of analgesia delivery are most influenced by emergency department (ED) crowding for pediatric patients with long-bone fractures. METHODS This cross-sectional, retrospective study included patients 0-21 years seen for acute, isolated long-bone fractures, November 2007 to October 2008, at a childrens hospital ED. Nine quality measures were studied: six were based on the timeliness (1-hour receipt) and effectiveness (receipt/nonreceipt) of three fracture-related processes: pain score, any analgesic, and opioid analgesic administration. Three equity measures were also tested: language, identified primary care provider (PCP), and insurance. The primary independent variable was a crowding measure: ED occupancy. Models were adjusted for age, language, insurance, identified PCP, triage level, ambulance arrival, and time of day. The adjusted risk of each timeliness or effectiveness quality measure was measured at five percentiles of crowding and compared to the risk at the 10th and 90th percentiles. The role of equity measures as moderators of the crowding-quality models was tested. RESULTS The study population included 1,229 patients. Timeliness and effectiveness quality measures showed an inverse association with crowding-an effect not moderated by equity measures. Patients were 4% to 47% less likely to receive timely care and were 3% to 17% less likely to receive effective care when each crowding measure was at the 90th than at the 10th percentile (p < 0.05). For three of the six quality measures, quality declined steeply between the 75th and 90th crowding percentiles. CONCLUSIONS Crowding is associated with decreased timeliness and effectiveness, but not equity, of analgesia delivery for children with fracture-related pain.


Pediatric Emergency Care | 2011

Emergency department crowding is associated with decreased quality of care for children.

Marion R. Sills; Diane L. Fairclough; Daksha Ranade; Michael G. Kahn

Objective: We sought to determine which of several simple indicators of emergency department crowding are most predictive of quality of care in 2 pediatric disease models: acute asthma and pain associated with long-bone fractures. Methods: We performed a retrospective, cross-sectional study of patients 2 to 21 years old seen for acute asthma and patients 0 to 21 years old seen for acute, isolated long-bone fractures from November 1, 2007, to October 31, 2008, at a single, academic childrens hospital emergency department. The main outcome measures were quality measures based on 3 asthma care-related processes-asthma score, &bgr;-agonist, and corticosteroid-and 2 fracture-related processes-analgesic and opioid analgesic. Good quality care was defined as receipt of an indicated process within 1 hour of arrival. Poor quality care was defined as nonreceipt or delayed receipt of an indicated process. Nine crowding measures were assigned based on conditions at each patients arrival. We calculated the adjusted risk of receiving good quality care for each quality measure at 5 percentiles of crowding for each crowding measure. Results: The asthma population included 927 patients, and the fracture population included 1229 patients. Among the 5 quality measures, we found rates of good quality care ranging from 23% to 64%. In adjusted models, we found an inverse association between crowding and quality. The 2 crowding measures with a consistently inverse association with the 5 quality measures across both populations were total patient-care hours and number arriving in prior 6 hours. Across the 10 models combining 1 of 2 key crowding variables with 1 of 5 quality measures, patients in the 2 populations were 0.40 (95% confidence interval, 0.27-0.55) to 0.78 (confidence interval, 0.71-0.85) times as likely to receive the indicated care process within 1 hour when each crowding measure was at the 75th than at the 25th percentile. Conclusions: Two measures of ED crowding are consistently associated with lower-quality asthma- and fracture-specific care in the ED for pediatric patients.


Pediatrics | 2000

Pediatric milliman and Robertson length-of-stay criteria : Are they realistic?

Marion R. Sills; Zhihuan J. Huang; Cheng Shao; Mark F. Guagliardo; James M. Chamberlain; Jill G. Joseph

Objective. Guidelines for inpatient length of stay (LOS) have been developed by several groups; among the most widely applied are those published by Milliman and Robertson (M&R). Few published reports have examined the relationship of actual practice to such guidelines, none in pediatric populations. This study was designed to compare pediatric practice in a large and defined population to M&R LOS criteria. Methods. Administrative data from New York State in 1995 were used to examine LOS for discharges corresponding to 16 selected pediatric diagnoses for which M&R publishes guidelines. Outliers, defined as the 2% of discharges with the longest LOS, were eliminated. The distribution of LOS for each diagnosis was compared with M&R LOS guidelines. Results. In New York State during 1995, pediatric LOS was markedly divergent from M&R guidelines. In general, the percentage of discharges in excess of the criterion LOS was less for nonmandatory admissions (croup: 23%, gastroenteritis: 44%, and pneumonia: 48%) than for those requiring surgery (uncomplicated appendectomy: 67%, pyloromyotomy: 62%, and major but noncritical burns: 64%) or prolonged treatment with antibiotics (bacterial meningitis: 91% and osteomyelitis: 86%). Conclusions. In New York State during 1995, LOS for selected pediatric conditions was generally in excess of published M&R guidelines. This raises concern about the potential effects of such guidelines on both patients and the hospitals caring for them. While endorsing the need for cost-effective practice, we call attention to the methods used to develop and validate guidelines. length of stay, pediatrics, managed health care, administrative data, practice guidelines.


Pediatrics | 2013

Community Household Income and Resource Utilization for Common Inpatient Pediatric Conditions

Evan S. Fieldston; Isabella Zaniletti; Matthew Hall; Jeffrey D. Colvin; Laura Gottlieb; Michelle L. Macy; Elizabeth R. Alpern; Rustin B. Morse; Paul D. Hain; Marion R. Sills; Gary Frank; Samir S. Shah

BACKGROUND AND OBJECTIVE: Child health is influenced by biomedical and socioeconomic factors. Few studies have explored the relationship between community-level income and inpatient resource utilization for children. Our objective was to analyze inpatient costs for children hospitalized with common conditions in relation to zip code-based median annual household income (HHI). METHODS: Retrospective national cohort from 32 freestanding children’s hospitals for asthma, diabetes, bronchiolitis and respiratory syncytial virus, pneumonia, and kidney and urinary tract infections. Standardized cost of care for individual hospitalizations and across hospitalizations for the same patient and condition were modeled by using mixed-effects methods, adjusting for severity of illness, age, gender, and race. Main exposure was median annual HHI. Posthoc tests compared adjusted standardized costs for patients from the lowest and highest income groups. RESULTS: From 116 636 hospitalizations, 4 of 5 conditions had differences at the hospitalization and at the patient level, with lowest-income groups having higher costs. The individual hospitalization level cost differences ranged from


The Journal of Pediatrics | 2013

Children's Hospitals with Shorter Lengths of Stay Do Not Have Higher Readmission Rates

Rustin B. Morse; Matthew Hall; Evan S. Fieldston; Denise M. Goodman; Jay G. Berry; Marion R. Sills; Rajendu Srivastava; Gary Frank; Paul D. Hain; Samir S. Shah

187 (4.1%) to


Pediatric Diabetes | 2013

Epidemiology of hyperglycemic hyperosmolar syndrome in children hospitalized in USA

Dayanand Bagdure; Arleta Rewers; Elizabeth J. Campagna; Marion R. Sills

404 (6.4%). Patient-level cost differences ranged from


American Journal of Emergency Medicine | 2013

Age- and sex-specific normal values for shock index in National Health and Nutrition Examination Survey 1999-2008 for ages 8 years and older.

Lara Rappaport; Sara Deakyne; Joseph A. Carcillo; Kim McFann; Marion R. Sills

310 to


American Journal of Public Health | 2015

A Framework for Describing Health Care Delivery Organizations and Systems

Ileana L. Piña; Perry D. Cohen; David B. Larson; Lucy N. Marion; Marion R. Sills; Leif I. Solberg; Judy Zerzan

1087 or 6.5% to 15% higher for the lowest-income patients. Higher costs were typically not for laboratory, imaging, or pharmacy costs. In total, patients from lowest income zip codes had

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Matthew Hall

Boston Children's Hospital

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Evan S. Fieldston

University of Pennsylvania

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Samir S. Shah

Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center

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Rustin B. Morse

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Jeffrey D. Colvin

University of Missouri–Kansas City

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Jessica L. Bettenhausen

University of Missouri–Kansas City

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Laura Gottlieb

University of California

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Paul D. Hain

University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center

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Diane L. Fairclough

University of Colorado Denver

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