*Ariadne Labs, Massachusetts General Hospital, Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health, Boston, MA†Ariadne Labs, Brigham and Women's Hospital, Boston, MA‡South Carolina Hospital Association, Clemson University§South Carolina Hospital Association, Columbia, SC.
Ann Surg. 2017 Dec;266(6):923-929. doi: 10.1097/SLA.0000000000002249.
To determine whether completion of a voluntary, checklist-based surgical quality improvement program is associated with reduced 30-day postoperative mortality.
Despite evidence of efficacy of team-based surgical safety checklists in improving perioperative outcomes in research trials, effective methods of population-based implementation have been lacking. The Safe Surgery 2015 South Carolina program was designed to foster state-wide engagement of hospitals in a voluntary, collaborative implementation of a checklist program.
We compared postoperative mortality rates after inpatient surgery in South Carolina utilizing state-wide all-payer discharge claims from 2008 to 2013, linked with state vital statistics, stratifying hospitals on the basis of completion of the checklist program. Changes in risk-adjusted 30-day mortality were compared between hospitals, using propensity score-adjusted difference-in-differences analysis.
Fourteen hospitals completed the program by December 2013. Before program launch, there was no difference in mortality trends between the completion cohort and all others (P = 0.33), but postoperative mortality diverged thereafter (P = 0.021). Risk-adjusted 30-day mortality among completers was 3.38% in 2010 and 2.84% in 2013 (P < 0.00001), whereas mortality among other hospitals (n = 44) was 3.50% in 2010 and 3.71% in 2013 (P = 0.3281), reflecting a 22% difference between the groups on difference-in-differences analysis (P = 0.0021).
Despite similar pre-existing rates and trends of postoperative mortality, hospitals in South Carolina completing a voluntary checklist-based surgical quality improvement program had a reduction in deaths after inpatient surgery over the first 3 years of the collaborative compared with other hospitals in the state. This may indicate that effective large-scale implementation of a team-based surgical safety checklist is feasible.
确定完成自愿性、基于检查表的手术质量改进计划是否与降低术后 30 天死亡率相关。
尽管团队为基础的手术安全检查表在研究试验中改善围手术期结果的疗效证据确凿,但缺乏有效的基于人群的实施方法。“2015 年南卡罗来纳州安全手术”计划旨在促进全州范围内的医院参与一项自愿性、协作性实施检查表计划。
我们利用 2008 年至 2013 年全州全付费出院索赔数据,并与州立生命统计数据相关联,对参与检查表计划的医院进行分层,比较了南卡罗来纳州住院手术术后死亡率。使用倾向评分调整后的差异差异分析比较了医院之间的 30 天风险调整死亡率变化。
到 2013 年 12 月,有 14 家医院完成了该计划。在计划启动之前,完成组和其他组之间的死亡率趋势没有差异(P = 0.33),但此后术后死亡率出现分歧(P = 0.021)。2010 年完成组的 30 天风险调整死亡率为 3.38%,2013 年为 2.84%(P < 0.00001),而其他医院(n = 44)的死亡率为 2010 年 3.50%和 2013 年 3.71%(P = 0.3281),差异分析显示两组之间差异为 22%(P = 0.0021)。
尽管术后死亡率的前期发生率和趋势相似,但参与南卡罗来纳州自愿性基于检查表的手术质量改进计划的医院在协作的头 3 年内,与该州其他医院相比,住院手术后的死亡人数有所减少。这可能表明,基于团队的手术安全检查表的有效大规模实施是可行的。