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CONTEXT: The Centers for Medicare hospital-specific, risk-standardized, 30-day mortality rates for AMI patients aged 66 years or older. RESULTS: We found moderately strong correlations (correlation coefficients > or =0.40; P values <.001) for all pairwise comparisons between beta-blocker use at admission and discharge, aspirin use at admission and discharge, and angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitor use, and weaker, but statistically significant, correlations between these medication measures and smoking cessation counseling and time to reperfusion therapy measures (correlation coefficients <0.40; P values <.001). Some process measures were significantly correlated with risk-standardized, 30-day mortality rates (P values <.001) but together explained only 6.0% of hospital-level variation in risk-standardized, 30-day mortality rates for patients with AMI. CONCLUSIONS: The publicly reported AMI process measures capture a small proportion of the variation in hospitals' risk-standardized short-term mortality rates. Multiple measures that reflect a variety of processes and also outcomes, such as risk-standardized mortality rates, are needed to more fully characterize hospital performance.
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Bradley et al. (Wed,) studied this question.
synapsesocial.com/papers/6a1bd5016f692abb725eed2a — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.296.1.72
Elizabeth H. Bradley
Vassar College
Jeph Herrin
Heart Failure & Transplant
Brian Elbel
Wagner College
JAMA
University of Michigan
Yale University
Harvard University Press
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