Public Reporting of Cardiac Surgery Performance: Part 1—History, Rationale, Consequences

Cardiac surgical report cards have historically been mandatory. This paradigm changed when The Society of Thoracic Surgeons recently implemented a voluntary public reporting program based on benchmark analyses from its National Cardiac Database. The primary rationale is to provide transparency and a...

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Veröffentlicht in:The Annals of thoracic surgery 2011-09, Vol.92 (3), p.S2-S11
Hauptverfasser: Shahian, David M., MD, Edwards, Fred H., MD, Jacobs, Jeffrey P., MD, Prager, Richard L., MD, Normand, Sharon-Lise T., PhD, Shewan, Cynthia M., PhD, O'Brien, Sean M., PhD, Peterson, Eric D., MD, MPH, Grover, Frederick L., MD
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Cardiac surgical report cards have historically been mandatory. This paradigm changed when The Society of Thoracic Surgeons recently implemented a voluntary public reporting program based on benchmark analyses from its National Cardiac Database. The primary rationale is to provide transparency and accountability, thus affirming the fundamental ethical right of patient autonomy. Previous studies suggest that public reporting facilitates quality improvement, although other approaches such as confidential feedback of results and regional quality improvement initiatives are also effective. Public reporting has not substantially impacted patient referral patterns or market share. However, this may change with implementation of healthcare reform and with refinement of public reporting formats to enhance consumer interpretability. Finally, the potential unintended adverse consequences of public reporting must be monitored, particularly to assure that hospitals and surgeons remain willing to care for high-risk patients.
ISSN:0003-4975
1552-6259
DOI:10.1016/j.athoracsur.2011.06.100