Researchers examined mortality data for 1,984 hospitals nationwide
from 2008 to 2012. During surprise inspections, 7.03 percent of
patients died within 30 days of being admitted to the hospital, the
study found. At other times, the 30-day mortality rate was 7.21
percent.
The difference was more pronounced at major teaching hospitals,
where mortality dropped to 5.93 percent during inspection weeks from
6.41 percent at other times.
“Our findings are surprising because they highlight how increased
focus, attention, and cognitive bandwidth, all of which happen when
people are being monitored, could lead to measurable improvements in
patient outcomes,” said senior study author Dr. Anupam Jena, a
health policy researcher at the Harvard T. H. Chan School of Public
Health in Boston.
The study focused on inspections by the Joint Commision, an
independent nonprofit group that evaluates hospitals at least once
every three years to see how well they follow patient safety
guidelines designed to avoid preventable deaths, infections and
errors like medication mistakes. Hospitals typically work hard
during inspections to make sure they pass. Failures, which are rare,
can result in a halt to payments from Medicare and Medicaid, which
often make up at least half of hospitals' revenue.
Jena and colleagues examined data on patients insured by Medicare,
the U.S. health program for the elderly. The study included 244,787
patients hospitalized during inspection weeks and another 1,462,339
patients hospitalized during the three weeks before and after
inspection periods.
Patients were typically about 73 years old and roughly 56 percent
were female. Many of them had chronic health problems like high
blood pressure, heart disease, elevated cholesterol or diabetes.
Researchers didn’t find any meaningful differences in how long
patients were hospitalized, how many people were admitted to the
hospital, reasons for diagnosis, patient characteristics or
procedures performed based on whether or not it was an inspection
week.
Across all the hospitals, however, researchers calculated that there
was a 1.5 percent decrease in mortality during inspection weeks. For
major teaching hospitals, researchers found a 5.9 percent decrease
in deaths during inspection periods.
Major teaching hospitals admitted an average of 900,000 Medicare
patients a year during the study period, researchers note in JAMA
Internal Medicine.
The absolute reduction in 30-day mortality rates of 0.39 percent
during inspection weeks at major teaching hospitals suggests there
may be some room to improve quality throughout the year, Jena said.
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“Nearly 3600 deaths could be avoided each year, or 10 deaths per
day, if care patterns that are observed during hospital inspection
weeks were the same year-round,” Jena added.
It’s possible that during inspection periods, doctors and nurses pay
closer attention to things that the inspectors check like
hand-washing to prevent the spread of infections. But there were not
fewer infections or adverse safety events during inspection weeks
than at other times, Jena said.
Another possibility is that shifts in how doctors and nurses make
diagnoses and treatment decisions during inspection weeks might lead
to better outcomes, Jena said.
One limitation of the study is that researchers weren’t able to
identify what might have caused the lower mortality rates during
inspection periods.
Patients admitted during inspection weeks might also be different
from patients seen at other times in ways the study didn’t capture,
noted Dr. Vineet Arora, a researcher at University of Chicago
Medicine who wasn’t involved in the study.
Hospitals might also respond to the arrival of inspectors with
heightened vigilance that translates into better quality care, Arora
said by email. For example, checking prescriptions before people
leave the hospital might improve mortality rates by reducing
medication errors.
“A modest reduction in mortality is certainly still a positive
thing,” Arora said.
“This study highlights that there is potential for us to learn what
is going on during those weeks that is associated with better
patient outcomes,” Arora added. “The question is whether it is due
to a concerted effort on the part of the hospitals to follow safe
practices or whether there is something else going on.”
SOURCE: http://bit.ly/2mIpxx2 JAMA Internal Medicine, online March
20, 2017.
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