Including versus excluding transferred patients with acute myocardial infarction altered hospital performance rankings, with mortality differences between highest and lowest ranked exceeding 1%.
Cohort (n=91,633)
Yes
Does the method of handling transferred patients with AMI impact hospital performance rankings based on 30-day mortality?
Excluding transferred patients with AMI may lead to inaccurate hospital performance rankings based on 30-day mortality rates.
OBJECTIVE: The objective of this population-based observational cohort study was to estimate the extent to which the inclusion/exclusion of transferred patients with acute myocardial infarction (AMI) impacts on hospital performance rankings. SUBJECTS: The authors studied 91,633 adult patients admitted to 116 acute care hospitals in Quebec, Canada, with a primary diagnosis of AMI between 1992 and 1999. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURE: Hospital performance ranks, based on 30-day AMI mortality rates, were estimated with hierarchical models and compared using 3 different methods for handling transferred patients (exclude all transfers; include transfers and assign outcome to the referring hospital; include transfers and assign outcome to the receiving hospital). The explanatory variable of interest was the hospital to which the patient's outcome was attributed. RESULTS: Using the 3 methods, 4 hospitals were ranked "best performers" once, and 1 hospital ranked among the best in 2 of the 3 analyses performed. Nine hospitals were ranked "worst performers" at least once (4 of which ranked among the "worst" once only, 2 ranked among the "worst" twice, and 3 were consistently ranked "worst performers" in all analyses). There was significant variation in mortality rates among hospitals, and the difference in the rates between the highest and lowest ranking hospitals exceeded the clinically relevant benchmark of 1%. CONCLUSIONS: Performance evaluation studies that compare hospital mortality rates typically exclude transferred patients. However, methods used to deal with AMI patient transfers influenced hospital ranks when comparing 30-day mortality rates. Excluding transfers may lead to an inaccurate depiction of the quality of healthcare services in regionalized healthcare systems that call for the timely interhospital transfer of patients with AMI.
Kosseim et al. (Fri,) conducted a cohort in Acute myocardial infarction (n=91,633). Inclusion of transferred patients in hospital mortality calculations vs. Exclusion of transferred patients was evaluated on Hospital performance ranks based on 30-day AMI mortality rates. Including versus excluding transferred patients with acute myocardial infarction altered hospital performance rankings, with mortality differences between highest and lowest ranked exceeding 1%.
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