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Outline of Presentation. What are AHRQ Patient Safety Indicators?How can you use QIO data to get them?What are their characteristics in one state?How can you share them with hospitals?What do one state's hospitals think of them?How do they relate to other evidence about safety in a state's hospitals?.
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1. Adapting AHRQ Patient Safety Indicators to QIO Data Jocelyn Andrel, MSPH
Charles P. Schade, MD, MPH
Patricia Ruddick, RN, MSN
3. AHRQ Patient Safety Indicators What they are
How to compute them
4. AHRQ Patient Safety Indicators: Background Early 1990s
Developed by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to measure the safety of hospital care using administrative inpatient discharge data. The Indicators screen for problems that patients experience as a result of exposure to the healthcare system.
5. Concept of PSIs Based on conditions that clearly reflect medical error (foreign body left in)
Based on conditions that could reflect medical error (PE or DVT)
Not based on underlying comorbidities
6. Steps to determine PSIs Define the concepts and the evaluation framework
Search the literature to identify potential PSIs
Develop a candidate list of PSIs
Review the PSIs
Evaluate the PSIs using empirical analysis
7. Limitations Some events don’t show up in discharge data
Adverse drug reactions
Medical events
Psychiatric events.
Administrative data may not address finer detail
Patient Safety Indicators should be used to prompt investigation into areas where the hospital could potentially improve quality of care
8. PSIs Accidental puncture or laceration
Complications of Anesthesia
Death in low mortality DRGs
Decubitus Ulcer
Failure to Rescue
Foreign body left in during procedure
Iatrogenic pneumothorax
Postoperative hemorrhage or hematoma
Postoperative hip fracture
9. PSIs continued Postoperative physiologic and metabolic derangement
Postoperative pulmonary embolism or DVT
Postoperative respiratory failure
Postoperative sepsis
Postoperative wound dehiscence
Selected infections due to medical care
Transfusion reaction
Plus 4 Obstetric measures not addressed here
10. Converting ISAT data General Instructions from AHRQ
1. The data must be in SAS
2. You may have to recode specific data elements to match what is used in the software.
Fortunately, conversion of the ISAT file to comport with the AHRQ input requirements is fairly simple
11. Conversion Elements Creating/Formatting Variables
Age
Length of Stay
Create variables for the number of diagnoses and the number of procedures
Set payor to the code for Medicare
Format Hospital codes, Race, Sex, Key, Hospital ID, DRG, Admission Source, Admission Type
Rename Diagnosis and Procedure codes
Major Diagnostic Codes from the HSE Claims Lookup Table
12. And then… The ISAT file is ready to be input into the AHRQ Patient Safety Indicator programs
13. AHRQ Patient Safety Indicators:Results in a Single State
14. Methods Adapted standard output (psp3 table at hospital level) to a graphic display and comparative report
Generated histograms of hospital performance on each indicator for 2000-2002
Generalized code to run with any state’s data as input
15. Results: Distribution of Hospitals Some indicators appeared normally distributed
Some were highly skewed, with outliers
Some appeared bimodal
16. AHRQ Risk Adjusted PSI RateFailure to RescueWV Hospitals, 2002
17. AHRQ Risk Adjusted PSI RateSelected Infections Due To Medical CareWV Hospitals, 2002
18. AHRQ Risk Adjusted PSI RatePost-Operative SepsisWV Hospitals, 2002
19. Results: Statewide Values Over 3 Years We also used the following format for the tabular report to individual hospitals
Most indicators based on small numerators statewide and appeared to show statistical fluctuation from year to year
Failure to rescue declining?
Postop sepsis and DVT/PE increasing?
23. Report to Hospitals Calendar year 2002, with offer of other years’ results
Tabular (see previous) and graphical format
Explanatory letter, definitions of indicators
Mailed to hospital patient safety contact or HCQIP contact
Asked for feedback on report contents and utility
25. Patient Safety Indicators:
26. Specific Goals of the WV Patient Safety Project Establish a system of confidential reporting for medical errors and near misses
Stimulate reporting of such events by developing a non-punitive response system
Provide feedback of surveillance data at appropriate levels of aggregation
Educate consumers of healthcare about patient safety guidelines
27. Comparing PSI Data to the Patient Safety Data Purpose:
1. Ascertain the usefulness of the PSI data in hospitals in West Virginia
2. Compare the data received from the PSI data to the data received from the Patient Safety Project
3. Explore further opportunities for quality improvement projects
28. PSI/Patient Safety Data Study CEOs and Quality Improvement staff from 41 acute care West Virginia hospitals received:
Information letter
Patient Safety Indicator definitions
Table which showed the actual number of specific incidences of each PSI (2002), crude and adjusted rates, and comparative percentiles of all hospitals in the state combined
Graphical representation of the data presented in the table
Brief questionnaire on the usefulness of the graph and tables
29. Patient Safety Questionnaire Feedback on the Patient Safety Indicator Reports
Please take a minute or two to tell us your reaction to the enclosed reports. Your responses will be kept confidential and used only for evaluating this project.
1. Please check the box that most closely describes your role in the hospital
o Quality improvement staff
o Patient safety staff
o Medical staff
o Clinical nursing staff
o Administration
o Other ________________
30. 2. Please circle the number indicating the extent to which you agree or disagree with each statement, where:
5 = strongly agree
4 = agree
3 = indifferent
2 = disagree
1 = strongly disagree
If a question is not applicable to your situation, please leave it blank.
Strongly agree...strongly disagree
a. The patient safety indicator reports were easy to understand
5 4 3 2 1
b. The graphic report was easier to use than the tabular report
5 4 3 2 1 Patient Safety Questionnaire, cont.
31. c. The tabular report provided more information than the graphic report
5 4 3 2 1
d. My hospital’s indicator results, compared with the state’s rates, are about what I would have expected
5 4 3 2 1
e. I want to share the report with colleagues in my hospital
5 4 3 2 1
f. I need additional information about one or more of the indicators
5 4 3 2 1 Patient Safety Questionnaire, cont.
32. 3. Please tell us anything you liked about the reports:
4. Please let us know of anything you did not like about the reports:
5. Finally, please let us know any questions you’d like answered about the reports: Patient Safety Questionnaire, cont.
33. Results(14/41 questionnaires returned)
34. Likes/dislikes about the PSI Reports Likes:
Good overview of our results
Serves as a step for further analysis
Great idea-shared this with Department of Medicine
Graphs were self-explanatory
Dislikes:
Leaves many questions unanswered
Need more current information
Would like to set up and run on their own
35. Examples
36. Conclusions Data captured from PSIs may best be used to investigate potential patient safety problems when hospitals compare PSIs to the coordinating medical error on the incident reporting tool since:
Some events don’t show up in discharge data that are captured in the incident reporting tool, e.g.
Adverse drug reactions
Administrative events
Fall events
Employee events
Visitor events
PSI data is more general and may have to use several fields in the incident reporting tool to capture complete PSI data
37. WVMI plans to: Compare 2003 PSI data with data from Web-based incident reporting tool for hospitals that are part of the WV Patient Safety Project
Unable to compare 2002 PSI data with patient safety data since the hospitals participating in the Patient Safety Project did not start until middle of 2002; and indicators do not correspond exactly.
Provide this information to each participating hospital in order that they will be able to compare their reporting rates to PSI data
38. Source AHRQ patient safety indicator programs http://www.qualityindicators.ahrq.gov
Conversion routines and hospital output code:
jandrel@wvmi.org
cschade@wvmi.org
WVMI’s Patient Safety Project
pruddick@wvmi.org