Miami University, Department of Sociology and Gerontology, Oxford, Ohio 45056-1879, USA.
Gerontologist. 2009 Dec;49(6):727-35. doi: 10.1093/geront/gnp066. Epub 2009 Jun 16.
The Minimum Data Set (MDS) is a uniform instrument used in nursing homes to assess residents. In January 2008, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services published a draft of a new MDS-version 3.0. This article traces the instrument's development and the design decisions that shaped it, discusses the MDS's manifest functions-data collection intended to drive quality improvement and the unintended consequences of its use-paper compliance and diminished attention to resident quality of life, and examines the revised version to gauge its success in meeting the instrument's objectives. Although results of the national evaluation of MDS 3.0 are promising, the revisions, especially those pertaining to quality-of-life assessment and the use of resident interviews and standardized assessment procedures, raise questions for future consideration. Additionally, past research suggests that the MDS's impact on quality-of-care improvement will be limited unless efforts are directed toward resolving the industry's persistent struggles with staffing, survey effectiveness, and the development of feasible care processes. MDS 3.0 seems most likely to achieve its potential if it operates within a multifaceted quality improvement framework.
最小数据集(MDS)是一种用于养老院评估居民的统一工具。2008 年 1 月,医疗保险和医疗补助服务中心发布了新版本 MDS-3.0 的草案。本文追溯了该工具的发展历程以及塑造它的设计决策,讨论了 MDS 的明显功能——旨在推动质量改进的数据收集,以及其使用所带来的意外后果——纸质文件合规性和对居民生活质量关注度的降低,并对修订后的版本进行了评估,以衡量其在实现工具目标方面的成功。尽管 MDS 3.0 的全国性评估结果令人鼓舞,但修订版,尤其是与生活质量评估以及使用居民访谈和标准化评估程序相关的修订版,为未来的考虑提出了一些问题。此外,过去的研究表明,除非努力解决该行业在人员配备、调查效果和可行护理流程开发方面持续存在的困难,否则 MDS 对改善护理质量的影响将是有限的。如果 MDS 3.0 能够在一个多方面的质量改进框架内运作,它最有可能发挥其潜力。