Cargando…

Avoidability of hospital deaths and association with hospital-wide mortality ratios: retrospective case record review and regression analysis

Objectives To determine the proportion of avoidable deaths (due to acts of omission and commission) in acute hospital trusts in England and to determine the association with the trust’s hospital-wide standardised mortality ratio assessed using the two commonly used methods - the hospital standardise...

Descripción completa

Detalles Bibliográficos
Autores principales: Hogan, Helen, Zipfel, Rebecca, Neuburger, Jenny, Hutchings, Andrew, Darzi, Ara, Black, Nick
Formato: Online Artículo Texto
Lenguaje:English
Publicado: BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2015
Materias:
Acceso en línea:https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4502415/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26174149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h3239
_version_ 1782381203359268864
author Hogan, Helen
Zipfel, Rebecca
Neuburger, Jenny
Hutchings, Andrew
Darzi, Ara
Black, Nick
author_facet Hogan, Helen
Zipfel, Rebecca
Neuburger, Jenny
Hutchings, Andrew
Darzi, Ara
Black, Nick
author_sort Hogan, Helen
collection PubMed
description Objectives To determine the proportion of avoidable deaths (due to acts of omission and commission) in acute hospital trusts in England and to determine the association with the trust’s hospital-wide standardised mortality ratio assessed using the two commonly used methods - the hospital standardised mortality ratio (HSMR) and the summary hospital level mortality indicator (SHMI). Design Retrospective case record review of deaths. Setting 34 English acute hospital trusts (10 in 2009 and 24 in 2012/13) randomly selected from across the spectrum of HSMR. Main outcome measures Avoidable death, defined as those with at least a 50% probability of avoidability in view of trained medical reviewers. Association of avoidable death proportion with the HSMR and the SHMI assessed using regression coefficients, to estimate the increase in avoidable death proportion for a one standard deviation increase in standardised mortality ratio. Participants 100 randomly selected hospital deaths from each trust. Results The proportion of avoidable deaths was 3.6% (95% confidence interval 3.0% to 4.3%). It was lower in 2012/13 (3.0%, 2.4% to 3.7%) than in 2009 (5.2%, 3.8% to 6.6%). This difference is subject to several factors, including reviewers’ greater awareness in 2012/13 of orders not to resuscitate, patients being perceived as sicker on admission, minor differences in review form questions, and cultural changes that might have discouraged reviewers from criticising other clinicians. There was a small but statistically non-significant association between HSMR and the proportion of avoidable deaths (regression coefficient 0.3, 95% confidence interval −0.2 to 0.7). The regression coefficient was similar for both time periods (0.1 and 0.3). This implies that a difference in HSMR of between 105 and 115 would be associated with an increase of only 0.3% (95% confidence interval −0.2% to 0.7%) in the proportion of avoidable deaths. A similar weak non-significant association was observed for SHMI (regression coefficient 0.3, 95% confidence interval −0.3 to 1.0). Conclusions The small proportion of deaths judged to be avoidable means that any metric based on mortality is unlikely to reflect the quality of a hospital. The lack of association between the proportion of avoidable deaths and hospital-wide SMRs partly reflects methodological shortcomings in both metrics. Instead, reviews of individual deaths should focus on identifying ways of improving the quality of care, whereas the use of standardised mortality ratios should be restricted to assessing the quality of care for conditions with high case fatality for which good quality clinical data exist.
format Online
Article
Text
id pubmed-4502415
institution National Center for Biotechnology Information
language English
publishDate 2015
publisher BMJ Publishing Group Ltd.
record_format MEDLINE/PubMed
spelling pubmed-45024152015-07-17 Avoidability of hospital deaths and association with hospital-wide mortality ratios: retrospective case record review and regression analysis Hogan, Helen Zipfel, Rebecca Neuburger, Jenny Hutchings, Andrew Darzi, Ara Black, Nick BMJ Research Objectives To determine the proportion of avoidable deaths (due to acts of omission and commission) in acute hospital trusts in England and to determine the association with the trust’s hospital-wide standardised mortality ratio assessed using the two commonly used methods - the hospital standardised mortality ratio (HSMR) and the summary hospital level mortality indicator (SHMI). Design Retrospective case record review of deaths. Setting 34 English acute hospital trusts (10 in 2009 and 24 in 2012/13) randomly selected from across the spectrum of HSMR. Main outcome measures Avoidable death, defined as those with at least a 50% probability of avoidability in view of trained medical reviewers. Association of avoidable death proportion with the HSMR and the SHMI assessed using regression coefficients, to estimate the increase in avoidable death proportion for a one standard deviation increase in standardised mortality ratio. Participants 100 randomly selected hospital deaths from each trust. Results The proportion of avoidable deaths was 3.6% (95% confidence interval 3.0% to 4.3%). It was lower in 2012/13 (3.0%, 2.4% to 3.7%) than in 2009 (5.2%, 3.8% to 6.6%). This difference is subject to several factors, including reviewers’ greater awareness in 2012/13 of orders not to resuscitate, patients being perceived as sicker on admission, minor differences in review form questions, and cultural changes that might have discouraged reviewers from criticising other clinicians. There was a small but statistically non-significant association between HSMR and the proportion of avoidable deaths (regression coefficient 0.3, 95% confidence interval −0.2 to 0.7). The regression coefficient was similar for both time periods (0.1 and 0.3). This implies that a difference in HSMR of between 105 and 115 would be associated with an increase of only 0.3% (95% confidence interval −0.2% to 0.7%) in the proportion of avoidable deaths. A similar weak non-significant association was observed for SHMI (regression coefficient 0.3, 95% confidence interval −0.3 to 1.0). Conclusions The small proportion of deaths judged to be avoidable means that any metric based on mortality is unlikely to reflect the quality of a hospital. The lack of association between the proportion of avoidable deaths and hospital-wide SMRs partly reflects methodological shortcomings in both metrics. Instead, reviews of individual deaths should focus on identifying ways of improving the quality of care, whereas the use of standardised mortality ratios should be restricted to assessing the quality of care for conditions with high case fatality for which good quality clinical data exist. BMJ Publishing Group Ltd. 2015-07-14 /pmc/articles/PMC4502415/ /pubmed/26174149 http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h3239 Text en © Hogan et al 2015 http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/ This is an Open Access article distributed in accordance with the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution (CC BY 4.0) license, which permits others to distribute, remix, adapt and build upon this work, for commercial use, provided the original work is properly cited. See: http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0/.
spellingShingle Research
Hogan, Helen
Zipfel, Rebecca
Neuburger, Jenny
Hutchings, Andrew
Darzi, Ara
Black, Nick
Avoidability of hospital deaths and association with hospital-wide mortality ratios: retrospective case record review and regression analysis
title Avoidability of hospital deaths and association with hospital-wide mortality ratios: retrospective case record review and regression analysis
title_full Avoidability of hospital deaths and association with hospital-wide mortality ratios: retrospective case record review and regression analysis
title_fullStr Avoidability of hospital deaths and association with hospital-wide mortality ratios: retrospective case record review and regression analysis
title_full_unstemmed Avoidability of hospital deaths and association with hospital-wide mortality ratios: retrospective case record review and regression analysis
title_short Avoidability of hospital deaths and association with hospital-wide mortality ratios: retrospective case record review and regression analysis
title_sort avoidability of hospital deaths and association with hospital-wide mortality ratios: retrospective case record review and regression analysis
topic Research
url https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC4502415/
https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/26174149
http://dx.doi.org/10.1136/bmj.h3239
work_keys_str_mv AT hoganhelen avoidabilityofhospitaldeathsandassociationwithhospitalwidemortalityratiosretrospectivecaserecordreviewandregressionanalysis
AT zipfelrebecca avoidabilityofhospitaldeathsandassociationwithhospitalwidemortalityratiosretrospectivecaserecordreviewandregressionanalysis
AT neuburgerjenny avoidabilityofhospitaldeathsandassociationwithhospitalwidemortalityratiosretrospectivecaserecordreviewandregressionanalysis
AT hutchingsandrew avoidabilityofhospitaldeathsandassociationwithhospitalwidemortalityratiosretrospectivecaserecordreviewandregressionanalysis
AT darziara avoidabilityofhospitaldeathsandassociationwithhospitalwidemortalityratiosretrospectivecaserecordreviewandregressionanalysis
AT blacknick avoidabilityofhospitaldeathsandassociationwithhospitalwidemortalityratiosretrospectivecaserecordreviewandregressionanalysis