Reliability of Evaluating Hospital Quality by Colorectal Surgical Site Infection Type

OBJECTIVE:To determine whether risk-adjusted colorectal SSI rates are statistically reliable as hospital quality measures. BACKGROUND:Policymakers use surgical site infections (SSI) for public reporting of hospital quality and pay-for-performance because they are a relatively common and costly cause...

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Veröffentlicht in:Annals of surgery 2013-12, Vol.258 (6), p.994-1000
Hauptverfasser: Lawson, Elise H, Ko, Clifford Y, Adams, John L, Chow, Warren B, Hall, Bruce Lee
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:OBJECTIVE:To determine whether risk-adjusted colorectal SSI rates are statistically reliable as hospital quality measures. BACKGROUND:Policymakers use surgical site infections (SSI) for public reporting of hospital quality and pay-for-performance because they are a relatively common and costly cause of patient morbidity. METHODS:Patients who underwent a colorectal procedure in 2009 were identified from the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program. We developed hierarchical multivariate logistic models for (1) superficial SSI, (2) deep/organ-space SSI, and (3) “any SSI” and compared how each model ranked hospital-level risk-adjusted performance. Statistical reliability of hospital quality measurements was estimated on a scale from 0 to 1; with 0 indicating that apparent variation between a hospitalʼs quality measurement and the average hospital is statistically unreliable, and 1 indicating that any observed variation is due to a real difference in performance. RESULTS:Mean reliability of hospital-level quality measurements was 0.650 for superficial, 0.404 for deep/organ-space, and 0.586 for “any SSI.” Lower reliability was accounted for by relatively little variation in risk-adjusted SSI rates between hospitals and insufficient numbers of colorectal cases submitted by individual hospitals. In 2009, we estimate that 22.1% of all US hospitals performed a sufficient number of colorectal cases to report superficial SSI rates at a high standard of statistical reliability and 1.0% did for deep/organ-space SSI. CONCLUSIONS:As currently constructed, colorectal SSI quality measures might not meet a high standard of statistical reliability for most hospitals, limiting their ability to confidently differentiate high and low performance. Despite an expectation of improving statistical power, combining superficial and deep/organ-space SSI into an “any SSI” measure worsens reliability.
ISSN:0003-4932
1528-1140
DOI:10.1097/SLA.0b013e3182929178