Scanlon Matthew C, Harris J Mitchell, Levy Fiona, Sedman Aileen
Division of Pediatric Critical Care, Medical College of Wisconsin, Milwaukee, Wisconsin, USA.
Pediatrics. 2008 Jun;121(6):e1723-31. doi: 10.1542/peds.2007-3247. Epub 2008 May 12.
Pediatric quality indicators were developed in 2006 by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality to identify potentially preventable complications in hospitalized children. Our objectives for this study were to (1) apply these algorithms to an aggregate children's hospital's discharge abstract database, (2) establish rates for each of the pediatric quality indicator events in the children's hospitals, (3) use direct chart review to investigate the accuracy of the pediatric quality indicators, (4) calculate the number of complications that were already present on admission and, therefore, not attributable to the specific hospitalization, and (5) evaluate preventability and calculate positive predictive value for each of the indicators. In addition, we wanted to use the data to set priorities for ongoing clinical investigation.
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality pediatric quality indicator algorithms were applied to 76 children's hospital's discharge abstract data (1794675 discharges) from 2003 to 2005. Rates were calculated for 11 of the pediatric quality indicators from all 3 years of discharge data: accidental puncture or laceration, decubitus ulcer, foreign body left in during a procedure, iatrogenic pneumothorax in neonates at risk, iatrogenic pneumothorax in nonneonates, postoperative hemorrhage or hematoma, postoperative respiratory failure, postoperative sepsis, postoperative wound dehiscence, selected infections caused by medical care, and transfusion reaction. Subsequently, clinicians from 28 children's hospitals reviewed 1703 charts in which complications had been identified. They answered questions as to correctness of secondary diagnoses that were associated with the indicator, whether a complication was already present on admission, and whether that complication was preventable, nonpreventable, or uncertain.
Across 3 years of data the rates of pediatric quality indicators ranged from a low of 0.01/1000 discharges for transfusion reaction to a high of 35/1000 for postoperative respiratory failure, with a median value of 1.85/1000 for the 11 pediatric quality indicators. Indicators were often already present on admission and ranged from 43% for infection caused by medical care to 0% for iatrogenic pneumothorax in neonates, with a median value of 16.9%. Positive predictive value for the subset of pediatric quality indicators occurring after admission was highest for decubitus ulcer (51%) and infection caused by medical care (40%). Because of the very large numbers of cases identified and its low preventability, the indicator postoperative respiratory failure is particularly problematic. The initial definition includes all children on ventilators postoperatively for >4 days with few exclusions. Being on a ventilator for 4 days would be a normal occurrence for many children with extensive surgery; therefore, the majority of the time does not indicate a complication and makes the indicator inappropriate.
A subset of pediatric quality indicators derived from administrative data are reasonable screening tools to help hospitals prioritize chart review and subsequent improvement projects. However, in their present form, true preventability of these complications is relatively low; therefore, the indicators are not useful for public hospital comparison. Identifying which complications are present on admission versus those that occur within the hospitalization will be essential, along with adequate risk adjustment, for any valid comparison between institutions. Infection caused by medical care and decubitus ulcers are clinically important indicators once the present-on-admission status is determined. These complications cause significant morbidity in hospitalized children, and research has shown a high level of preventability. The pediatric quality indicator software can help children's hospitals objectively review their cases and target improvement activities appropriately. The postoperative-respiratory-failure indicator does not represent a complication in the majority of cases and, therefore, should not be included for hospital screening or public comparison. Chart review should become part of the development process for quality indicators to avoid inappropriate conclusions that misdirect quality-improvement resources.
医疗保健研究与质量局于2006年制定了儿科质量指标,以识别住院儿童中潜在可预防的并发症。本研究的目的是:(1)将这些算法应用于一家综合儿童医院的出院摘要数据库;(2)确定儿童医院中每项儿科质量指标事件的发生率;(3)通过直接查阅病历调查儿科质量指标的准确性;(4)计算入院时就已存在、因此不归因于特定住院治疗的并发症数量;(5)评估每项指标的可预防性并计算阳性预测值。此外,我们希望利用这些数据为正在进行的临床研究确定优先事项。
将医疗保健研究与质量局的儿科质量指标算法应用于一家儿童医院2003年至2005年的76份出院摘要数据(1794675次出院)。根据三年出院数据计算了11项儿科质量指标的发生率:意外穿刺或撕裂伤、压疮、手术中遗留异物、有风险的新生儿医源性气胸、非新生儿医源性气胸、术后出血或血肿、术后呼吸衰竭、术后败血症、术后伤口裂开、医疗护理引起的特定感染以及输血反应。随后,来自28家儿童医院的临床医生查阅了1703份已确定有并发症的病历。他们回答了与该指标相关的二级诊断是否正确、并发症在入院时是否已经存在以及该并发症是否可预防、不可预防或不确定等问题。
在三年的数据中,儿科质量指标的发生率范围从输血反应的0.01/1000次出院的低发生率到术后呼吸衰竭的35/1000次出院的高发生率,11项儿科质量指标的中位数为1.85/1000次出院。指标在入院时往往就已存在,范围从医疗护理引起的感染的43%到新生儿医源性气胸的0%,中位数为16.9%。入院后发生的儿科质量指标子集的阳性预测值在压疮(51%)和医疗护理引起的感染(40%)方面最高。由于确定的病例数量非常多且其可预防性低,术后呼吸衰竭指标尤其成问题。最初的定义包括术后使用呼吸机超过4天的所有儿童,几乎没有排除情况。对于许多接受广泛手术的儿童来说,使用呼吸机4天是正常情况;因此,大多数时候这并不表明是并发症,使得该指标不合适。
从管理数据中得出的一部分儿科质量指标是合理的筛查工具,可帮助医院确定病历审查和后续改进项目的优先顺序。然而,就目前的形式而言,这些并发症的真正可预防性相对较低;因此,这些指标对于公立医院的比较没有用处。确定哪些并发症在入院时就已存在与哪些是在住院期间发生的,对于机构之间的任何有效比较以及进行充分的风险调整都至关重要。一旦确定了入院时的状态,医疗护理引起的感染和压疮就是临床上重要的指标。这些并发症在住院儿童中导致显著的发病率,并且研究表明其具有很高的可预防性。儿科质量指标软件可以帮助儿童医院客观地审查其病例并适当地确定改进活动的目标。术后呼吸衰竭指标在大多数情况下并不代表并发症,因此,不应将其纳入医院筛查或公开比较。病历审查应成为质量指标开发过程的一部分,以避免得出误导质量改进资源的不当结论。