Holt Peter James Edward, Sinha Sidhartha, Ozdemir Baris Ata, Karthikesalingam Alan, Poloniecki Jan Dominik, Thompson Matt Merfyn
Department of Outcomes Research, St George's University of London, London, UK.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2014 Jun 19;14:270. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-14-270.
The quality of care delivered and clinical outcomes of care are of paramount importance. Wide variations in the outcome of emergency care have been suggested, but the scale of variation, and the way in which outcomes are inter-related are poorly defined and are critical to understand how best to improve services. This study quantifies the scale of variation in three outcomes for a contemporary cohort of patients undergoing emergency medical and surgical admissions. The way in which the outcomes of different diagnoses relate to each other is investigated.
A retrospective study using the English Hospital Episode Statistics 2005-2010 with one-year follow-up for all patients with one of 20 of the commonest and highest-risk emergency medical or surgical conditions. The primary outcome was in-hospital all-cause risk-standardised mortality rate (in-RSMR). Secondary outcomes were 1-year all-cause risk-standardised mortality rate (1 yr-RSMR) and 28-day all-cause emergency readmission rate (RSRR).
2,406,709 adult patients underwent emergency medical or surgical admissions in the groups of interest. Clinically and statistically significant variations in outcome were observed between providers for all three outcomes (p < 0.001). For some diagnoses including heart failure, acute myocardial infarction, stroke and fractured neck of femur, more than 20% of hospitals lay above the upper 95% control limit and were statistical outliers. The risk-standardised outcomes within a given hospital for an individual diagnostic group were significantly associated with the aggregated outcome of the other clinical groups.
Hospital-level risk-standardised outcomes for emergency admissions across a range of specialties vary considerably and cross traditional speciality boundaries. This suggests that global institutional infra-structure and processes of care influence outcomes. The implications are far reaching, both in terms of investigating performance at individual hospitals and in understanding how hospitals can learn from the best performers to improve outcomes.
所提供的医疗服务质量和临床护理结果至关重要。有人提出急诊护理结果存在广泛差异,但差异的程度以及结果之间的相互关联方式定义不明确,而了解如何最好地改善服务,这些至关重要。本研究对当代接受急诊内科和外科住院治疗的患者队列的三种结果的差异程度进行了量化。研究了不同诊断结果之间的相互关系。
一项回顾性研究,使用2005 - 2010年英国医院病历统计数据,对患有20种最常见和最高风险急诊内科或外科疾病之一的所有患者进行为期一年的随访。主要结果是住院全因风险标准化死亡率(in - RSMR)。次要结果是1年全因风险标准化死亡率(1 yr - RSMR)和28天全因急诊再入院率(RSRR)。
在感兴趣的组中有2,406,709名成年患者接受了急诊内科或外科住院治疗。在所有三种结果方面,各医疗机构之间均观察到了具有临床和统计学意义的差异(p < 0.001)。对于某些诊断,包括心力衰竭、急性心肌梗死、中风和股骨颈骨折,超过20%的医院高于95%控制上限,属于统计学上的异常值。对于特定医院内单个诊断组的风险标准化结果与其他临床组的汇总结果显著相关。
一系列专科急诊入院的医院层面风险标准化结果差异很大,且跨越传统专科界限。这表明整体机构基础设施和护理流程会影响结果。这在调查个别医院的绩效以及理解医院如何向表现最佳者学习以改善结果方面都具有深远影响。