Division of Research and Optimal Patient Care, American College of Surgeons, Chicago, IL 60611, USA.
Ann Surg. 2010 Jul;252(1):183-90. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0b013e3181e4846e.
Hospitals increasingly rely on surgical quality assessment programs that require considerable resources to capture outcomes after hospital discharge. However, it is unclear whether capturing postdischarge complications and deaths is important. Our objectives were (1) to determine the frequency of postdischarge complications and deaths and (2) to determine whether hospital rankings change with inclusion of postdischarge outcomes.
From 181 hospitals participating in the American College of Surgeon's National Surgical Quality Improvement Program, 329,951 patients were identified (2006-2007). Mortality and 19 complications within 30 days of the index operation were categorized as occurring before or after discharge. Risk-adjusted hospital rankings were compared based on whether only predischarge (inpatient) versus both pre- and postdischarge (inpatient and outpatient within 30 days of operation) morbidity and mortality were included.
Postdischarge complications accounted for 32.9% of all complications. Certain complications occurred frequently after discharge: surgical site infections (66.0%), urinary tract infections (39.4%), pulmonary embolisms (42.2%), and deep venous thromboses (34.5%). Of all patients experiencing complications, 39.7% had only postdischarge complications. Of 5827 postoperative deaths, 23.6% occurred after discharge. Hospital quality rankings changed when postdischarge outcomes were excluded versus included for morbidity (median hospital rank change: 16 ranks; interquartile range, 7-36) and mortality (median hospital rank change: 14 ranks; interquartile range, 6-29), and there was disagreement in outlier status designations depending on whether postdischarge events were included (morbidity: kappa = 0.546; mortality: kappa = 0.507).
A substantial proportion of postoperative complications and deaths occur after hospital discharge. Inclusion of postdischarge events considerably affects hospital quality rankings and outlier status designations. Quality improvement programs and research that do not consider postdischarge outcomes may offer incomplete information to hospitals, payers, providers, and patients.
医院越来越依赖需要大量资源才能捕获出院后结果的外科质量评估计划。然而,尚不清楚捕获出院后并发症和死亡是否重要。我们的目标是:(1)确定出院后并发症和死亡的频率;(2)确定是否将出院后结果纳入会改变医院的排名。
在美国外科医师学院国家外科质量改进计划参与的 181 家医院中,确定了 329951 例患者(2006-2007 年)。将索引手术后 30 天内的死亡率和 19 种并发症分为发生在出院前或出院后。基于仅包括术前(住院)与术前和术后(手术 30 天内的住院和门诊)发病率和死亡率比较了风险调整后的医院排名。
出院后并发症占所有并发症的 32.9%。某些并发症经常在出院后发生:手术部位感染(66.0%)、尿路感染(39.4%)、肺栓塞(42.2%)和深静脉血栓形成(34.5%)。所有发生并发症的患者中,有 39.7%只有出院后并发症。在 5827 例术后死亡中,有 23.6%发生在出院后。当排除与包括术后出院结果时,医院质量排名会发生变化(发病率:中位数医院排名变化 16 位;四分位间距,7-36)和死亡率(中位数医院排名变化 14 位;四分位间距,6-29),并且根据是否包括出院后事件,对离群值状态的指定存在分歧(发病率:kappa = 0.546;死亡率:kappa = 0.507)。
大量术后并发症和死亡发生在出院后。纳入出院后事件会极大地影响医院质量排名和离群值状态的指定。不考虑出院后结果的质量改进计划和研究可能会向医院、支付者、提供者和患者提供不完整的信息。