Ansari M Z, Collopy B T
ACHS Care Evaluation Program, St Vincents Hospital, Fitzroy, Vic., Australia.
J Qual Clin Pract. 1995 Jun;15(2):75-80.
Hospitals presenting voluntarily for accreditation survey during 1993 submitted data on pulmonary embolism to the Australian Council on Health Care Standard (ACHS) Care Evaluation Program (CEP) as a part of their medical quality activities. The data were stratified by hospital type and bed-size, and compared to the provisional threshold of 1%. The mean duration of data collection was 24 weeks (range 8-74 weeks). Of hospitals with bed-size 1-50, 77% observed a zero pulmonary embolism rate. Hospitals with zero and non-zero pulmonary embolism rates were significantly different with respect to bed-size (P = 0.001). The rarity of pulmonary embolism and lack of prospective continuous monitoring poses considerable problems in interpretation of aggregate rates. Hospitals with a high patient throughout should continuously monitor their pulmonary embolism data to achieve a large denominator. For smaller hospitals with a low performance of major operations, collection of data on this clinical indicator is unlikely to be useful as a measure of quality of care.