Literature DB >> 8688923

The California Hospital Outcomes Project: using administrative data to compare hospital performance.

P S Romano1, A Zach, H S Luft, J Rainwater, L L Remy, D Campa.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: The California Hospital Outcomes Project was created by an act of the state legislature in 1991. The California Office of Statewide Health Planning and Development (OSHPD) publishes annual reports on risk-adjusted hospital outcomes for medical, surgical, and obstetric patients. These outcomes indicators were chosen: in-hospital mortality within 30 days (acute myocardial infarction [AMI]), reported post-operative complications (diskectomy, delivery), post-operative length of stay (diskectomy), and readmission within 6 weeks (delivery). Project reports are based on discharge abstracts submitted by hospitals and edited by OSHPD. For each outcome, two risk adjustment models were used to estimate expected and risk-adjusted hospital outcome rates, along with p values representing the likelihood that the observed number of adverse outcomes occurred by chance.
RESULTS: The first hospital outcomes report was distributed to hospitals in June 1993 and released to the public in December 1993. The total number of hospitals labeled as "better than expected" was 14 for AMI, 5 for cervical diskectomy, and 25 for lumbar diskectomy. The second hospital outcomes report was distributed to hospitals in June 1995. RESPONSE AND
CONCLUSIONS: Letters submitted for 168 hospitals in response to the 1993 report demonstrated that hospitals had studied and used project results to evaluate their coding practices and quality of care. Media coverage of the 1993 report was balanced but sometimes critical of OSHPD's failure to identify "worse" hospitals. In response to providers' concerns, OSHPD has undertaken a validation study to explore whether differences in coding, unmeasured risk factors, or processes of care explain the reported differences in risk-adjusted outcome rates.

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Year:  1995        PMID: 8688923     DOI: 10.1016/s1070-3241(16)30195-x

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Jt Comm J Qual Improv        ISSN: 1070-3241


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3.  Public release of performance data and quality improvement: internal responses to external data by US health care providers.

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4.  Analysis, assessment, and presentation of risk-adjusted statewide obstetrical care data: the StORQS II study in Washington State. Statewide Obstetrics Review and Quality System.

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6.  Measuring hospital quality: can medicare data substitute for all-payer data?

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7.  Are diagnosis specific outcome indicators based on administrative data useful in assessing quality of hospital care?

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8.  Identifying pediatric community-acquired pneumonia hospitalizations: Accuracy of administrative billing codes.

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Review 9.  Risk assessment methods for cardiac surgery and intervention.

Authors:  Nassir M Thalji; Rakesh M Suri; Kevin L Greason; Hartzell V Schaff
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Review 10.  What is the empirical evidence that hospitals with higher-risk adjusted mortality rates provide poorer quality care? A systematic review of the literature.

Authors:  David W Pitches; Mohammed A Mohammed; Richard J Lilford
Journal:  BMC Health Serv Res       Date:  2007-06-20       Impact factor: 2.655

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