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Relevance of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality Patient Safety Indicators for children's hospitals.

机译:医疗研究机构和儿童医院质量患者安全指标的相关性。

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OBJECTIVES: Patient safety indicators (PSIs) were developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. Our objectives were (1) to apply these algorithms to the National Association of Children's Hospitals and Related Institutions (NACHRI) Aggregate Case Mix Comparative Database for 1999-2002, (2) to establish mean rates for each of the PSI events in children's hospitals, (3) to investigate the inadequacies of PSIs in relation to pediatric diagnoses, and (4) to express the data in such a way that children's hospitals could use the PSIs determined to be appropriate for pediatric use for comparison with their own data. In addition, we wanted to use the data to set priorities for ongoing clinical investigations and to propose interventions if the indicators demonstrated preventable errors. METHODS: The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality PSI algorithms (version 2.1, revision 1) were applied to children's hospital administrative data (1.92 million discharges) from the NACHRI Aggregate Case Mix Comparative Database for 1999-2002. Rates were measured for the following events: complications of anesthesia, death in low-mortality diagnosis-related groups (DRGs), decubitus ulcer, failure to rescue (ie, death resulting from a complication, rather than the primary diagnosis), foreign body left in during a procedure, iatrogenic pneumothorax, infection attributable to medical care (ie, infections related to surgery or device placement), postoperative hemorrhage or hematoma, postoperative pulmonary embolism or venous thrombosis, postoperative wound dehiscence, and accidental puncture/laceration. RESULTS: Across the 4 years of data, the mean risk-adjusted rates of PSI events ranged from 0.01% (0.1 event per 1000 discharges) for a foreign body left in during a procedure to 14.0% (140 events per 1000 discharges) for failure to rescue. Review of International Classification of Diseases, Ninth Revision, Clinical Modification codes associated with each PSI category showed that the failure to rescue and death inlow-mortality DRG indicators involved very complex cases and did not predict preventable events in the majority of cases. The PSI for infection attributable to medical care appeared to be accurate the majority of the time. Incident risk-adjusted rates of infections attributable to medical care averaged 0.35% (3.5 events per 1000 discharges) and varied up to fivefold from the lowest rate to the highest rate. The highest rates were up to 1.8 times the average. CONCLUSIONS: PSIs derived from administrative data are indicators of patient safety concerns and can be relevant as screening tools for children's hospitals; however, cases identified by these indicators do not always represent preventable events. Some, such as a foreign body left in during a procedure, iatrogenic pneumothorax, infection attributable to medical care, decubitus ulcer, and venous thrombosis, seem to be appropriate for pediatric care and may be directly amenable to system changes. Evidence-based practices regarding those particular indicators that have been reported in the adult literature need to be investigated in the pediatric population. In their present form, 2 of the indicators, namely, failure to rescue and death in low-mortality DRGs, are inaccurate for the pediatric population, do not represent preventable errors in the majority of pediatric cases, and should not be used to estimate quality of care or preventable deaths in children's hospitals. The PSIs can assist institutions in prioritizing chart review-based investigations; if clusters of validated events emerge in reviews, then improvement activities can be initiated. Large aggregate databases, such as the NACHRI Case Mix Database, can help establish mean rates of potential pediatric events, giving children's hospitals a context within which to examine their own data.
机译:目标:患者安全指标(PSI)由医疗研究与质量局制定。我们的目标是(1)将这些算法应用于1999-2002年全国儿童医院和相关机构协会(NACHRI)综合病例组合比较数据库,(2)确定儿童医院中每个PSI事件的平均发生率, (3)调查与儿科诊断有关的PSI的不足之处,以及(4)以使儿童医院可以将确定为适合儿科使用的PSI与自己的数据进行比较的方式来表达数据。此外,我们希望利用这些数据为正在进行的临床研究确定优先次序,并在指标显示可预防的错误时提出干预措施。方法:将医疗保健研究机构和质量PSI算法(2.1版,修订版1)应用于NACHRI总病例组合比较数据库中1999-2002年儿童医院的行政数据(192万出院)。测量以下事件的发生率:麻醉并发症,低死亡率诊断相关组(DRG)死亡,褥疮性溃疡,抢救失败(即因并发症而不是主要诊断导致死亡),异物遗留在手术过程中,医源性气胸,可归因于医疗的感染(即与手术或器械放置相关的感染),术后出血或血肿,术后肺栓塞或静脉血栓形成,术后伤口裂开以及意外穿刺/结扎。结果:在4年的数据中,PSI事件的平均风险调整率范围为:在手术期间遗留的异物的0.01%(每1000次排放中有0.1事件)到失败的14.0%(每1000次排放中有140事件)。救援。与每种PSI类别相关的《国际疾病分类》,《第九修订版》和《临床修改规范》的审查表明,挽救和死亡低死亡率DRG指标失败涉及非常复杂的病例,并且在大多数情况下无法预测可预防的事件。在大多数情况下,归因于医疗的感染PSI似乎是准确的。归因于医疗的事故风险调整后的感染率平均为0.35%(每1000次排出事件中有3.5事件),从最低到最高的比率变化了五倍。最高比率高达平均水平的1.8倍。结论:从行政数据中得出的PSI是患者安全问题的指标,可以作为儿童医院的筛查工具。但是,这些指标确定的案例并不总是代表可预防的事件。某些因素,例如在手术过程中遗留的异物,医源性气胸,可归因于医疗的感染,褥疮,静脉血栓形成等,似乎适合于儿科护理,并且可能直接适合于系统改变。关于成年文献中已报道的那些特定指标的循证实践,需要在儿科人群中进行调查。以目前的形式,其中两项指标,即低死亡率DRG中的抢救失败和死亡,对于儿科人群而言是不准确的,在大多数儿科病例中并不代表可预防的错误,因此不应用于评估质量儿童医院的护理或可预防的死亡。 PSI可以帮助机构确定基于图表审查的调查的优先级;如果在审阅中出现了一系列经过验证的事件,则可以启动改进活动。大型综合数据库(例如NACHRI病例组合数据库)可以帮助确定潜在的儿科事件的平均发生率,从而为儿童医院提供检查其自身数据的环境。

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