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The National Indicators Project. Being undertaken by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare for the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care Funded by the CommissionObjectives:Recommend indicators for national reporting on safety and quality Enable the Commission to rep
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1. Towards national indicators of safety and quality in health care Jenny Hargreaves
Economics and Health Services Group
Australian Institute of Health and Welfare
2. The National Indicators Project Being undertaken by the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare for the Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care
Funded by the Commission
Objectives:
Recommend indicators for national reporting on safety and quality
Enable the Commission to report publicly on the state of health care safety and quality
Enable the Commission to advise Ministers on whether existing reporting processes and collections should be continued, enhanced or replaced
3. The Australian Institute of Health and Welfare Australia's national agency for health and welfare statistics and information
An independent statutory authority operating under the Australian Institute of Health and Welfare Act 1987
Ensures data collections are kept securely and confidentially
Sets our role to develop, collate, analyse and disseminate information and statistics
Board, Ethics Committee
Work closely with State, Territory and Australian Government agencies, and other stakeholders
100+ reports each year: www.aihw.gov.au
4. The National Indicators Project In collaboration with the Commission
With advice of the Project’s National Indicators Advisory Group
An AIHW discussion paper Towards national indicators of safety and quality in health care recently released
A draft suite of 58 indicators
Context information on indicator purpose and development
Consultation phase currently in progress
Final report to the Commission in early 2009
5. Scope of health services covered Settings in which clinical care is delivered by registered practitioners where the primary purpose of the setting is health care
Health care provided to patients
Hospitals, general practice, non-acute care, community health….
Includes dental health care, ambulance and residential aged care
Excludes public health, such as health promotion, environmental health, safety promotion activities, OHS
6. Definitions: Safety and quality Safety – avoidance or reduction of actual or potential harm from health care
Quality – 4 dimensions
Appropriateness – based on established standards
Effectiveness – achieves desired outcomes
Continuity of care – coordinated across providers, time
Responsiveness – respect for persons, client oriented: patient-centredness
A ‘balanced scorecard’ approach, in part
7. Exclusions Access
Focussing on the safety and quality of care that is delivered, rather than on whether patients receive care, or how long they wait
Currently included in other national indicator sets, eg National Health Performance Committee indicators in AIHW’s Australia’s Health
Efficiency, sustainability, capability
8. Indicator framework
9. Equity Considered across the framework:
Indicators could be presented for a range of ‘equity’ groups, as appropriate:
Indigenous vs non-Indigenous
Rural, remote vs capital cities
Socio-economic status
Public vs private providers
Large vs small providers
10. Types of indicators included Definition of Indicators:
A key statistical measure selected to help describe (indicate) a situation concisely, track progress and performance, and act as a guide to decision-making
not necessarily accurate measures – but required level of accuracy would depend on the purpose
Outcome (Example: risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality rates)
Process (Example: Assessment of VTE risk)
Structure (Example: Accreditation of health care services)
Counts/rates/risk adjustment
11. How indicators could be used Comparisons over time/ trends
Comparisons for subgroups
Indigenous, socio-economic patient groups
Providers/facilities/organisations
Benchmarking
International comparisons
A manageable number of indicators
12. ‘Cascading’ indicator sets Necessarily, a ‘manageable’ number of indicators would not provide a detailed view of all aspects of safety and quality for all areas of the health and aged care system.
Other indicator sets would remain important to provide more comprehensive views
for specific types of services eg Key Performance Indicators for Public Sector Mental Health Services,
for safety and quality of care for specialty groups, eg ACHS clinical indicator sets
for specific population groups eg the Aboriginal and Torres Strait Islander Health Performance Framework,
To provide more comprehensive ‘balanced scorecards’ for health services, including aspects such as efficiency, eg National Health Performance Committee indicators
14. Sentinel events excluded Numbers relatively low, so difficult to use as indicators
Important for health care safety and quality
Major focus at local level, with incident monitoring
Health Ministers require reporting
Report on Government Services, Commission Windows report
A related structure indicator included
Appropriate incident monitoring arrangements, including sentinel events monitoring
15. Public reporting A role of the Commission is to report publicly on the state of safety and quality, including performance against national standards
The Commission is developing a strategic framework which will inform its approach to public reporting
Broadly, the AIHW suggests two purposes:
Informing the general public about the health system overall, and to inform discussion and decision-making about overall priorities and system-level strategies for safety and quality improvement
To report on the safety and quality of aspects of specific health care services, to provide information to the providers of the services that would directly inform their quality improvement activities
16. Public reporting Conceptualised as four Levels of application for considering the proposed indicators
Health system overall
Health care sectors, eg hospitals
Facilities/organisations
Clinicians
The proposed indicators cover all four ‘levels of application’. The balance may change to suit future approaches to public reporting.
17. Level of application: overall health system, health sector Meaningful to general public and senior policy makers, but ideally also to service providers
Focus on international comparisons, population groups, trends over time for Australia
Example: 5 year cancer survival rates
18. Level of application: organisation/facility, clinician Meaningful to clinicians and others involved in the delivery of health care service, and ideally to the general public and policy makers
Focus on informing local quality improvement activities
Support comparisons or benchmarking of service provider organisations
Example: Pressure ulcers in care settings
19. Method Scanned lists of indicators used nationally, internationally and by states and territories
Consulted with stakeholders – a process that is continuing
Including within AIHW’s work to develop performance indicators for Health Ministers earlier in 2008
Consultation with the National Indicators Advisory Group
Assessment and analysis of the indicators
20. Summary list of indicators Healthy start (3)
Birth trauma – injury to neonate
Low birth weight infants
Decayed, missing or filled teeth among primary school children
Staying healthy (4)
Oral health care plans in residential aged care
Eye testing for target populations
Failure to diagnose
Potentially preventable hospitalisations
21. Summary list of indicators, ctd Getting better (33)
Assessment of risk of venous thromboembolism
Appropriate prophylaxis for venous thromboembolism
Appropriate use of antibiotics in general practice for upper respiratory tract infection
Ambulance services: survival from out-of-hospital cardiac arrest
Pain management in emergency departments
Thrombolysis for AMI
Thrombolysis for stroke
Stroke patients treated in a stroke unit
22. Summary list of indicators, ctd Getting better, ctd
Management of AMI
Management of congestive heart failure
Mental health inpatients having seclusion
Health care associated infections acquired in hospital
Staphylococcus aureus (including MRSA) bacteraemia in acute care hospitals
Adverse drug events
Pressure ulcers in care settings
Falls resulting in patient harm (health and aged care)
23. Summary list of indicators, ctd Getting better, ctd
Intentional self-harm in hospitals
Complications of anaesthesia
Accidental puncture/laceration (technical difficulty with procedure
Obstetric trauma – third and fourth degree tears
Postoperative respiratory failure
Postoperative haemorrhage
Postoperative PE or DVT
Unplanned return to operating theatre
24. Summary list of indicators, ctd Getting better, ctd
Unplanned readmission to ICU
Unplanned hospital readmission
Failure to prevent a clinical important deterioration
Risk-adjusted hospital mortality
Death in low mortality DRGs
Independent peer review of surgical deaths
Appropriate incident monitoring arrangements, including sentinel events
Knee and hip replacement revision within 5 years
Cancer survival
25. Living with illness and disability (14)
Continuity of care – discharge planning
Post-discharge community care for mental health patients
Functional gain achieved in rehabilitation
Enhanced primary care services in general practice
General practices with a register and recall system for patients with chronic disease
People with asthma with a written asthma plan
Management of hypertension in general practice
Summary list of indicators, ctd
26. Living with illness and disability, ctd
Management of chronic pain in arthritis and musculoskeletal conditions
Annual cycle of care for people with diabetes
End stage renal failure in patients with diabetes
Lower extremity amputation in patients with diabetes
Treatment of depression in primary care
Inappropriate co-prescribing of medicines
People receiving a home medicine review
Summary list of indicators, ctd
27. Summary list of indicators, ctd Coping with end of life (1)
Quality of palliative care
All health needs domains (3)
Quality of community pharmacy services
Accreditation of health care services
Patient experience – eg treatment with dignity and respect, involvement in decision making, access to information
28. Information presented on the indicators
29. Information presented on the indicators, ctd
30. Information presented on the indicators, ctd
31. Information presented on the indicators, ctd
32. Coverage: Safety and Quality Domains Safety: 25
Appropriateness: 43
Effectiveness: 28
Responsiveness: 7
Continuity of care: 15
33. Coverage: health care needs Healthy start – 3
Staying healthy – 4
Getting better – 33
Living with illness and disability – 14
Coping with end of life – 1
All domains - 3
34. Coverage: health settings Hospitals (40)
Primary care (26)
Aged care (9)
Maternal and child health (5)
Dental health (7)
Rehab/palliative care (9)
35. Coverage: National Health Priority Areas
36. Coverage: Burden of disease categories
37. Coverage: Areas of health expenditure
38. Coverage: Disease and injury expenditure categories
39. Coverage: Level of application of the indicators Health system (8)
cancer survival rates
Unplanned hospital readmissions
Sector (7)
Potentially preventable hospitalisations
People receiving a home medicine review
Facility/organisation (30)
Oral health care plans in residential aged care
Self-harm in hospital
Clinician (13)
Appropriate use of antibiotics in general practice for URTI
Complications of anaesthesia
40. Data availability Comprehensive data not available for all indicators, but scope was not limited to current national data sources
Reported at national level (28 indicators)
Reported by survey (9 indicators)
Data development required (12 indicators)
Data linkage (4 indicators)
Still at concept stage (5 indicators)
41. Support projects Assessment of the feasibility of national indicators of in-hospital mortality (AIHW National Injury Surveillance Unit at Flinders University)
A survey of safety and quality indicators relating to primary health care
Analysis of Australian data for patient safety indicators developed by the OECD
42. Support project: Measuring and reporting mortality Two components:
Literature review on methods for analysis of in-hospital mortality
Modelling project aimed at identifying national indicators of hospital mortality that can be used now, or in the future
43. Support project: Measuring and reporting mortality, ctd Literature review
Emerging international consensus on risk-adjusted Hospital Standardised Mortality Ratio (HSMR), factors to include for risk adjustment, modelling methods, cases to exclude (eg palliative care)
Reported regularly and publicly in several countries
Tables, funnel plots, caterpillar plots
44. Support project: Measuring and reporting mortality, ctd Used National Hospital Morbidity Database, and risk-adjusted Canadian Referred Mortality Model (RACM)
Logistic regression modelling, including principal diagnosis, age, sex, comorbidity, length of stay, admission status, transfer status
Comparison of observed and expected rates
Comparison of public hospital peer groups
Three groups of cases
High risk (less than 20% of cases, 80% of deaths)
Low risk (all others)
All cases
45. Support project: Measuring and reporting mortality, ctd Results similar to those reported in the international literature
Good discrimination of performance between hospitals, particularly larger ones, and consistent over 3 years
A modest decline in overall risk-adjusted mortality rates over the 3-year period
Demonstration of methods to present findings – HSMR ranked tables, funnel plots, caterpillar plots
Demonstrated that NHMD suitable for calculating these indicators for screening purposes
Discussion of improvements possible if/when
data linkage to capture 30-day post-discharge mortality
‘Condition onset’ flag available to refine the model
Private hospital identifiers become available for analysis
46. Support project: safety and quality indicators in primary care Focus on the subset of indicators in the proposed suite that relate to primary care
Brief review of primary care indicator suites and indicator reporting nationally and internationally
Assessment of the indicators against the framework for this project
Most indicators are of appropriateness (and access), fewer for safety and other dimensions
Most indicators relate to general practice, few for community health, allied health…..
Mostly process indicators, but some outcome and structure indicators
47. Support project: safety and quality indicators in primary care, ctd Discussion of Australian data sources that are or could be relevant to the proposed primary care indicators
Including emerging electronic data collection in general practice
Presentation of detailed specifications, rationale and current Australian and international use of each indicator
Discussion of methods for presentation
Presentation of available data for the indicators using different presentation methods and disaggregations
48. Support project: Australian data for OECD patient safety indicators OECD indicators developed from the AHRQ patient safety indicators, as part of the OECD Health Care Quality Indicators project
15 patient safety indicators piloted with a number of OECD countries
Australia participated to assist in assessment of the use of the indicators in the proposed national indicator suite, particularly anticipating needs for international comparisons
Translated ICD-10 specifications to ICD-10-AM
Analysed using National Hospital Morbidity Database; public/private, public hospital peer groups, 3 years
49. Support project: Australian data for OECD patient safety indicators One not calculable using Australian data; 3 had very small or volatile numbers
Remaining 11 were considered suitable for national and international reporting
Six included (at least as options) in the proposed indicator suite
Technical difficulty with procedure
Postoperative PE/DVT
Postoperative respiratory failure
Birth trauma – injury to neonate
Complications of anaesthesia
Pressure ulcers
Limited risk adjustment in the algorithm, so caution required for sector/peer group comparisons; data suggest casemix-associated differences in rates (eg rates generally higher in the public sector)
50. Next steps AIHW and Commission are consulting stakeholders
Receive feedback on proposed indicators
Review feedback with the National Indicators Advisory Group
Final report provided to Commission in early 2009
Commission to consider and provide recommendations to AHMAC
51. Final report to Commission Recommendations for national indicators
Data specifications
Current availability and quality of data
Data for indicators (where available)
Gaps in coverage
Need for data development work
Options for national reporting/information use
Options for international comparison
52. Comments please Gaps
Whole of system
Specific areas of interest
Overlaps, over-emphases
Details of the specifications
Data sources
Usefulness
Applicability for various reporting purposes
53. Comments please Secure AIHW website:
Discussion paper with draft suite of indicators
Primary care indicators discussion paper
Draft report on measuring and reporting mortality
Draft report on Australian data for OECD patient safety indicators
Feedback form
To obtain a password to the site:
Email: hcsqu-consultation@aihw.gov.au
Phone 02 6244 1229
Comments by 9 December 2008