Medium distances to specialized care models at tertiary hospitals and socioeconomic neighborhood-related factors do not influence the quality of care for patients with liver cirrhosis

Department

Internal Medicine

Document Type

Article

Publication Title

European Journal of Gastroenterology & Hepatology

Abstract

Background: The treatment of liver cirrhosis requires a multidisciplinary approach at expert centers. Given the disease's complexity and serious consequences, care quality significantly impacts patient survival. Specialized care models at tertiary hospitals are thought to improve treatment outcomes and quality of life. This study evaluates whether proximity to an expert center influences care quality and patient outcomes and investigates the role of socioeconomic factors and social support in Germany.

Methods: A retrospective evaluation was conducted on 299 patients with liver cirrhosis treated at Medical Faculty Mannheim, Heidelberg University, with 43% at Child-Pugh B stage. The analysis considered various distances to the hospital (10 and 20 km by car, straight-line distance and public transportation usage) and correlated these with patient survival.

Results: The analysis showed that neither car travel distance (P = 0.221, P = 0.1894), straight-line distance (log-rank P = 0.221, cox regression P = 0.1894), nor public transportation usage (P = 0.363, P = 0.1845) up to over 50 km or more than 120 min traveling by public transportation significantly affected survival. Geographical accessibility and differing socioeconomic conditions did not impact treatment quality or survival rates. Known risk factors such as age (P = 0.007, P < 0.0001), gender (P = 0.019, P = 0.0207) and Child-Pugh stage (P = 0.003, P = 0.0155) significantly influenced survival.

Conclusion: Specialized care models at tertiary hospitals offer consistent high-quality care to rural populations not facing disadvantages in survival due to longer travel distances to expert hepatology centers. Socioeconomic backgrounds do not affect care quality in this care model.

First Page

91

Last Page

101

DOI

10.1097/MEG.0000000000003094

Volume

38

Issue

1

Publication Date

1-1-2026

Medical Subject Headings

Humans; Male; Female; Retrospective Studies; Liver Cirrhosis; Middle Aged; Tertiary Care Centers; Socioeconomic Factors; Health Services Accessibility; Aged; Germany; Residence Characteristics; Social Support; Risk Factors; Adult; Treatment Outcome; Quality Indicators, Health Care; Time Factors; Quality of Health Care; Transportation

PubMed ID

41364014

Share

COinS