Neuman Heather B, Michelassi Fabrizio, Turner James W, Bass Barbara Lee
Department of Surgery, Weill Medical College of Cornell University, New York, NY, USA.
Surgery. 2009 Jan;145(1):27-33. doi: 10.1016/j.surg.2008.08.002. Epub 2008 Sep 19.
In an era of proliferating systems of quality assessment, surgeon confidence in metric tools is essential for successful initiatives in quality improvement. We evaluated surgeons' awareness and attitudes about ACS-NSQIP, which is the only national, surgeon-developed, risk-adjusted, system of surgical outcome assessment.
A 33-item survey instrument was constructed and content validity established through content expert review; test-retest reliability was assessed (weighted-kappa = 0.72). Survey administration occurred in three institutions with varying ACS-NSQIP experience. Summary statistics were generated and subgroup analyses performed (Fisher's exact test).
One-hundred and eight surgeons participated. Practice experience varied (27% residents, 33% < 10, 12% 10-20, and 28% > 20 years). Seventy-two percent had fellowship training. Surgeons were familiar with ACS-NSQIP structure, including prospective data collection (70%), case-sampling (63%), and reporting as observed/expected ratios (83%). Surgeons knew some collected data-points but misidentified EKG-findings of MI (67%), surgeon case-experience (41%), and anastomotic dehiscence (79%). Most felt ACS-NSQIP would improve quality of care (79%) and identify areas for improvement (92%). Surgeons were less confident regarding utility at an individual level, with only 46% believing surgeon-specific outcomes should be reported. Few thought ACS-NSQIP data should be available publicly (45%), used for marketing (26%), or direct pay-for-performance (24%). Reservations were most pronounced among surgeons with institutional ACS-NSQIP experience.
While surgeons accept ACS-NSQIP at an institutional level, skepticism remains surrounding measurement of individual outcomes and public reporting. Surgeons at institutions with a longer duration of experience with ACS-NSQIP tended to be more cynical about potential data applications. Ongoing education and assessment of surgeons' perceptions of quality improvement initiatives is necessary to ensure surgeons remain engaged actively in determining how quality of care data is measured and utilized.
在质量评估体系不断增多的时代,外科医生对衡量工具的信心对于质量改进的成功举措至关重要。我们评估了外科医生对美国外科医师学会国家外科质量改进计划(ACS - NSQIP)的认知和态度,该计划是唯一由外科医生制定的、经过风险调整的全国性手术结果评估体系。
构建了一份包含33个条目的调查问卷,并通过内容专家评审确定了内容效度;评估了重测信度(加权kappa系数 = 0.72)。在三个具有不同ACS - NSQIP经验的机构进行了调查。生成了汇总统计数据并进行了亚组分析(Fisher精确检验)。
108名外科医生参与了调查。实践经验各不相同(27%为住院医师,33%少于10年,12%为10 - 20年,28%超过20年)。72%的人接受过专科培训。外科医生熟悉ACS - NSQIP的结构,包括前瞻性数据收集(70%)、病例抽样(63%)以及以观察/预期比率进行报告(83%)。外科医生知道一些收集的数据点,但错误识别了心肌梗死的心电图表现(67%)、外科医生的病例经验(41%)以及吻合口裂开(79%)。大多数人认为ACS - NSQIP会提高医疗质量(79%)并识别改进领域(92%)。外科医生对个体层面的效用信心较低,只有46%的人认为应该报告外科医生特定的结果。很少有人认为ACS - NSQIP数据应公开可用(45%)、用于营销(26%)或直接用于绩效薪酬(24%)。在有机构ACS - NSQIP经验的外科医生中,保留意见最为明显。
虽然外科医生在机构层面接受ACS - NSQIP,但对于个体结果的衡量和公开报告仍存在怀疑。在ACS - NSQIP方面经验持续时间较长的机构中的外科医生往往对潜在的数据应用更为愤世嫉俗。持续对外科医生关于质量改进举措的认知进行教育和评估,对于确保外科医生积极参与确定医疗质量数据的测量和使用方式是必要的。