Imagine facing a life-threatening heart failure called cardiogenic shock. You are admitted to a hospital, but the level of care available there might change your chances of survival. A massive review looked at over 1.1 million hospitalizations across the United States between 2016 and 2022. The data comes from a national database that tracks inpatient care. The goal was simple: does the capability of the hospital affect who lives and who does not?
The findings were clear. Hospitals with higher cardiac capability, such as those that can perform transplants or implant LVADs, had much lower death rates. In the most advanced centers, the death rate was 36.5%. In non-PCI hospitals, it was 64.5%. Even after accounting for how sick patients were, being in a higher-tier hospital was linked to better survival. This suggests that having the right tools and specialists makes a real difference.
But there is a complex reality. Patients who were transferred from other hospitals to these advanced centers had higher death rates overall. This is a known risk in emergency medicine. However, the study found that the most advanced centers helped lower this specific risk. The link between hospital capability and survival is strong, but experts say we still do not fully understand how this works for transferred patients or those who are very unstable.
This research supports a system where patients are referred early to specialized hubs. It shows that where you get care matters, but the journey to get there is also part of the story. While the connection is strong, we must be careful not to assume that moving to a better hospital guarantees safety for every single patient.