Performance of Pediatric Readmission Measures

BACKGROUND Readmission rates are frequently used as a hospital quality metric; yet multiple measures exist to evaluate pediatric readmission rates. We sought to assess how four different measures of pediatric readmission compare with assessment of both preventable and unplanned readmission. METHODS...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of hospital medicine 2020-12, Vol.15 (12), p.723-726
Hauptverfasser: Auger, Katherine A, Ponti‐Zins, Michael C, Statile, Angela M, Wesselkamper, Kris, Haberman, Beth, Hanke, Samuel P
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:BACKGROUND Readmission rates are frequently used as a hospital quality metric; yet multiple measures exist to evaluate pediatric readmission rates. We sought to assess how four different measures of pediatric readmission compare with assessment of both preventable and unplanned readmission. METHODS Clinicians on hospital medicine, cardiology, neonatology, and neurology teams reviewed medical records for 30‐day readmissions using an ion tool with high interrater reliability for preventability assessment. Readmissions between July 2014 and June 2016 were classified separately as preventable or not preventable and planned or unplanned. We compared the classifications to four existing readmission metrics: all‐cause readmission, unplanned readmission/time flag classification, the pediatric all‐condition readmission, and potentially preventable readmission. We calculated sensitivity and specificity for all readmission metrics. RESULTS Among 30‐day readmissions considered, 1,643 were eligible for medical record review; 1,125 reviews were completed by the clinical teams (68%). On medical record review, the majority of readmissions were determined not preventable (85%). Only 15% were classified as unplanned and preventable. None of the four readmission measures had appropriate sensitivity or specificity for identifying preventable readmission. The unplanned readmission/time flag classification had the highest sensitivity (95%) and specificity (90%) in identifying unplanned readmissions. CONCLUSION None of the existing pediatric readmission measures can reliably determine preventability. The unplanned readmission/time flag measure performed best in identifying unplanned readmissions.
ISSN:1553-5592
1553-5606
DOI:10.12788/jhm.3521