Literature DB >> 9192589

The challenge of benchmarking: surgical volume and operative mortality in Veterans Administration Medical Centers.

E W Bates1, S E Berki, R K Homan, S M Lindenauer.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: This study examines the relationship between hospital surgical volume and operative modality rate. Emphasis is placed on the role of referral patterns; the effects of variation in patient condition, operative procedures, and hospital characteristics, and the contribution of volume of related procedures, in addition to specific-procedure volume, the definition of operative mortality, and their influence on surgical outcome.
METHODS: This cohort study included all Department of Veterans Affairs Medical Centers with surgery programs. All patients in five operation-diagnosis sets (colectomy for cancer, colectomy without cancer, amputation above the knee, coronary artery bypass grafting for old myocardial infarction, and open-heart valvuloplasty), discharged from 1987 through 1989, were assessed to determine the risk-adjusted 30-day postoperative morality rate.
RESULTS: Only one of the studied groups, valvuloplasty, demonstrated a significant inverse relationship between hospital surgical volume and operative mortality rate. No additional effect on outcome owing to related procedure volume was noted.
CONCLUSIONS: This study demonstrates some of the difficulties in assessing surgical results and that we should be skeptical of the intuitively attractive notion that high annual volumes of operations will necessarily result in improved outcomes. This is congruent with recent literature in which there is no broad-based evidence that hospital surgical volume affects operative mortality rate.

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Year:  1996        PMID: 9192589

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Best Pract Benchmarking Healthc        ISSN: 1085-0635


  3 in total

1.  Variations among high volume surgeons in the rate of complications after radical prostatectomy: further evidence that technique matters.

Authors:  Fernando J Bianco; Elyn R Riedel; Colin B Begg; Michael W Kattan; Peter T Scardino
Journal:  J Urol       Date:  2005-06       Impact factor: 7.450

2.  Using administrative databases for outcomes research: select examples from VA Health Services Research and Development.

Authors:  D C Cowper; D M Hynes; J D Kubal; P A Murphy
Journal:  J Med Syst       Date:  1999-06       Impact factor: 4.460

3.  Accuracy of national surgery quality improvement program models in predicting postoperative morbidity in patients undergoing colectomy.

Authors:  Jeffrey A Neale; Craig Reickert; Andrew Swartz; Subhash Reddy; Maher A Abbas; Ilan Rubinfeld
Journal:  Perm J       Date:  2014
  3 in total

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