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Status and perspectives of hospital mortality in a public urban Hellenic hospital, based on a five-year review

BACKGROUND: Analysis of hospital mortality helps to assess the standards of health-care delivery. METHODS: This is a retrospective cohort study evaluating the causes of deaths which occurred during the years 1995–1999 in a single hospital. The causes of death were classified according to the Interna...

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Autores principales: Papadopoulos, Iordanis N, Papaefthymiou, Maria, Roumeliotis, Leonidas, Panagopoulos, Vasilios G, Stefanidou, Anna, Kostaki, Anastasia
Formato: Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BioMed Central 2008
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2257958/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18215322
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-8-28
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author Papadopoulos, Iordanis N
Papaefthymiou, Maria
Roumeliotis, Leonidas
Panagopoulos, Vasilios G
Stefanidou, Anna
Kostaki, Anastasia
author_facet Papadopoulos, Iordanis N
Papaefthymiou, Maria
Roumeliotis, Leonidas
Panagopoulos, Vasilios G
Stefanidou, Anna
Kostaki, Anastasia
author_sort Papadopoulos, Iordanis N
collection PubMed
description BACKGROUND: Analysis of hospital mortality helps to assess the standards of health-care delivery. METHODS: This is a retrospective cohort study evaluating the causes of deaths which occurred during the years 1995–1999 in a single hospital. The causes of death were classified according to the International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). RESULTS: Of the 149,896 patients who were discharged the 5836 (3.4%) died. Males constituted 55% and females 45%. The median age was 75.1 years (1 day – 100 years). The seven most common ICD-10 chapters IX, II, IV, XI, XX, X, XIV included 92% of the total 5836 deaths. The most common contributors of non-neoplasmatic causes of death were cerebrovascular diseases (I60–I69) at 15.8%, ischemic heart disease (I20–I25) at 10.3%, cardiac failure (I50.0–I50.9) at 7.9%, diseases of the digestive system (K00–K93) at 6.7%, diabetes mellitus (E10–E14) at 6.6%, external causes of morbidity and mortality (V01–Y98) at 6.2%, renal failure (N17–N19) at 4.5%, influenza and pneumonia (J10–J18) at 4.1% and certain infectious and parasitic diseases (A00–B99) at 3.2%, accounting for 65.3% of the total 5836 deaths. Neoplasms (C00–D48) caused 17.7% (n = 1027) of the total 5836 deaths, with leading forms being the malignant neoplasms of bronchus and lung (C34) at 3.5% and the malignant neoplasms of large intestine (C18–21.2) at 1.5%. The highest death rates occurred in the intensive care unit (23.3%), general medicine (10.7%), cardiology (6.5%) and nephrology (5.5%). Key problems related to certification of death were identified. Nearly half of the deaths (49.3%: n = 2879) occurred by the completion of the third day, which indicates the time limits for investigation and treatment. On the other hand, 6% (n = 356) died between the 29(th )and 262(nd )days after admission. Inadequacies of the emergency care service, infection control, medical oncology, rehabilitation, chronic and terminal care facilities, as well as lack of regional targets for reducing mortality related to diabetes, recruitment of organ donors, provision for the aging population and lack of prevention programs were substantiated. CONCLUSION: Several important issues were raised. Disease specific characteristics, as well as functional and infrastructural inadequacies were identified and provided evidence for defining priorities and strategies for improving the standards of care. Effective transformation can promise better prospects.
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spelling pubmed-22579582008-02-28 Status and perspectives of hospital mortality in a public urban Hellenic hospital, based on a five-year review Papadopoulos, Iordanis N Papaefthymiou, Maria Roumeliotis, Leonidas Panagopoulos, Vasilios G Stefanidou, Anna Kostaki, Anastasia BMC Public Health Research Article BACKGROUND: Analysis of hospital mortality helps to assess the standards of health-care delivery. METHODS: This is a retrospective cohort study evaluating the causes of deaths which occurred during the years 1995–1999 in a single hospital. The causes of death were classified according to the International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD-10). RESULTS: Of the 149,896 patients who were discharged the 5836 (3.4%) died. Males constituted 55% and females 45%. The median age was 75.1 years (1 day – 100 years). The seven most common ICD-10 chapters IX, II, IV, XI, XX, X, XIV included 92% of the total 5836 deaths. The most common contributors of non-neoplasmatic causes of death were cerebrovascular diseases (I60–I69) at 15.8%, ischemic heart disease (I20–I25) at 10.3%, cardiac failure (I50.0–I50.9) at 7.9%, diseases of the digestive system (K00–K93) at 6.7%, diabetes mellitus (E10–E14) at 6.6%, external causes of morbidity and mortality (V01–Y98) at 6.2%, renal failure (N17–N19) at 4.5%, influenza and pneumonia (J10–J18) at 4.1% and certain infectious and parasitic diseases (A00–B99) at 3.2%, accounting for 65.3% of the total 5836 deaths. Neoplasms (C00–D48) caused 17.7% (n = 1027) of the total 5836 deaths, with leading forms being the malignant neoplasms of bronchus and lung (C34) at 3.5% and the malignant neoplasms of large intestine (C18–21.2) at 1.5%. The highest death rates occurred in the intensive care unit (23.3%), general medicine (10.7%), cardiology (6.5%) and nephrology (5.5%). Key problems related to certification of death were identified. Nearly half of the deaths (49.3%: n = 2879) occurred by the completion of the third day, which indicates the time limits for investigation and treatment. On the other hand, 6% (n = 356) died between the 29(th )and 262(nd )days after admission. Inadequacies of the emergency care service, infection control, medical oncology, rehabilitation, chronic and terminal care facilities, as well as lack of regional targets for reducing mortality related to diabetes, recruitment of organ donors, provision for the aging population and lack of prevention programs were substantiated. CONCLUSION: Several important issues were raised. Disease specific characteristics, as well as functional and infrastructural inadequacies were identified and provided evidence for defining priorities and strategies for improving the standards of care. Effective transformation can promise better prospects. BioMed Central 2008-01-23 /pmc/articles/PMC2257958/ /pubmed/18215322 http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-8-28 Text en Copyright © 2008 Papadopoulos et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0 This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License ( (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0) ), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.
spellingShingle Research Article
Papadopoulos, Iordanis N
Papaefthymiou, Maria
Roumeliotis, Leonidas
Panagopoulos, Vasilios G
Stefanidou, Anna
Kostaki, Anastasia
Status and perspectives of hospital mortality in a public urban Hellenic hospital, based on a five-year review
title Status and perspectives of hospital mortality in a public urban Hellenic hospital, based on a five-year review
title_full Status and perspectives of hospital mortality in a public urban Hellenic hospital, based on a five-year review
title_fullStr Status and perspectives of hospital mortality in a public urban Hellenic hospital, based on a five-year review
title_full_unstemmed Status and perspectives of hospital mortality in a public urban Hellenic hospital, based on a five-year review
title_short Status and perspectives of hospital mortality in a public urban Hellenic hospital, based on a five-year review
title_sort status and perspectives of hospital mortality in a public urban hellenic hospital, based on a five-year review
topic Research Article
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2257958/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/18215322
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-8-28
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