Hospital Performance Measurement and Quality Improvement Initiatives Insights from the US Surgical Care Improvement Project Dale W. Bratzler, DO, MPH QIOSC Medical Director Oklahoma Foundation for Medical Quality Outline • Factors driving policy related to quality measurementt and d paymentt incentives i ti • Infrastructure for measurement and reporting g Care Improvement p Project j • The Surgical • Unintended consequences of performance measurement 1 Cost and Quality Problems • Well documented deficiencies in the quality of care – Substantial underuse of recommended care regardless of income, race, or age • Substantial regional variation in the use of healthcare services without evidence of additional dditi l benefit b fit tto patients ti t iin hi high h utilization regions • Costs Cost and Quality Problems • $2.2 trillion on healthcare this year alone • $600 billion for Medicare and Medicaid – By 2030, at present rate of growth will consume 50% of Federal budget • Disconnect between payments and performance – Paid the same regardless of quality – Often paid more for care that results in avoidable complications Volume-based Payment 2 Figure 1. International Comparison of Spending on Health, 1980–2005 Average spending on health per capita ($US PPP) 7000 6000 United States Germany Canada France Australia United Kingdom Total expenditures on health as percent of GDP 16 14 5000 12 4000 10 8 3000 6 2000 4 1000 2 0 United States Germany Canada France Australia United Kingdom 19 80 19 82 19 84 19 86 19 88 19 90 19 92 19 94 19 96 19 98 20 00 20 02 20 04 19 80 19 82 19 84 19 86 19 88 19 90 19 92 19 94 19 96 19 98 20 00 20 02 20 04 0 Source: K. Davis, C. Schoen, S. Guterman, T. Shih, S. C. Schoenbaum, and I. Weinbaum, Slowing the Growth of U.S. Health Care Expenditures: What Are the Options?, The Commonwealth Fund, January 2007, updated with 2007 OECD data Problem #2 = Variation Dartmouth Atlas of Healthcare 6 3 Front page – New York Times, August 18, 2006. Elyria has three times the rate of angioplasties of Cleveland, 30 miles away! 4 #3 – Quality of Care http://www.ahrq.gov/qual/nhqr07/nhqr07.pdf “Health care quality is improving only modestly, at best,” said AHRQ Director Carolyn M. Clancy, M.D. “Given that health care spending is rising much faster, these findings about quality underscore the urgency to improve the value Americans are getting for their health care dollars.” 5 Problems with healthcare quality and safety are commonly exposed in lay press… 6 Policy to Accelerate Improvement 7 What is the best policy to accelerate improvement? • Voluntary reporting of nationally standardized measures of hospital quality • Strategies for accelerating quality improvement: – Pay-for-reporting (P4R) – Pay-for-performance (P4P) Despite limited evidence demonstrating benefit, P4R and P4P are being widely advocated Congressional Action • 2003 Medicare Modernization Act (MMA) – Established Pay-for-Reporting y p g ((P4R)) p program g for Section (d) hospitals under Medicare • Report on 10 clinical measures or receive 0.4% reduction in Annual Payment Update (APU) on inpatient services • 2005 Deficit Reduction Act (DRA) – Expanded required performance measures – 2.0% reduction in APU on inpatient services for nonnon reporting – Secretary to develop Value-based Purchasing (i.e. P4P) for Medicare hospital services 8 Does public reporting accelerate quality improvement? Hospital Public Reporting – Role of Payment Incentives for Reporting 0.4% payment incentive to report 10 measures listed in the Medicare Modernization Act of 2003 4043 4192 1952 1407 434 August, 2003 February, 2004 May, 2004 October, 2004 March, 2005 Number of Reporting Hospitals 9 N Engl J Med 2005;353:255-64. Williams S et al. N Engl J Med 2005;353:255-264 N Engl J Med 2005;353:255-64. 10 Lindenauer PK et al. N Engl J Med 2007;356:486-496. Improvement in Composite Process Measures among Hospitals Engaged in Both Pay for Performance and Public Reporting and Those Engaged Only in Public Reporting Lindenauer PK et al. N Engl J Med 2007;356:486-496. 11 Infrastructure for Measurement and Improvement 12 www.hospitalcompare.hhs.gov The Consensus Development Process The National Quality Forum www.qualityforum.org 26 13 National Technology and Transfer Advancement of Act of 1995 (NTTAA) • Defines the five key attributes of a “voluntary consensus standards-setting standards setting body body” (i.e., (i e openness, balance of interest, due process, consensus, and an appeals process) • Obligates Federal government to adopt voluntary consensus standards (when the government is adopting standards) All “core” hospital performance measures are submitted for endorsement by the National Quality Forum and are not used for public reporting until endorsed. 27 Genesis of the Hospital “Core” Measures • For all p performance measurement initiatives, development based on: – Disease impact (morbidity, mortality, patient QoL, costs of care) – Guidelines that provide evidence-base to support measures – Gaps in performance 14 Data Reporting Infrastructure • Performance measure specifications based on guidelines and vetted with recognized experts – Specific inclusions and exclusions, analytic algorithms, etc (Measure Information Forms) • Detailed data element specifications created and used to program electronic data collection tools – Used byy hospitals p for self-abstraction of medical records – Hospital abstraction subject to random validation audits Details of measures and data elements available at: www.qualitynet.org under the Hospital – Inpatient tab (Specifications Manual) Current Core Topics • Acute myocardial infarction – Leading cause of death in the US • Heart failure – Most common reason Medicare patients are hospitalized • Pneumonia – Second most common reason that Medicare patients are hospitalized • Surgical Care Improvement Project – More than 30 million operations with wide variation in outcomes 15 Reporting Samples – Q1, 2007 Reporting Hospitals Cases reported Acute Myocardial Infarction 3,415 103,334 Heart Failure 4,211 230,088 Pneumonia 4,359 221,921 Surgical Care 3,565 283,630 Core topic *all numbers close approximates. The Surgical Infection Prevention and Surgical Care Improvement Projects 16 Why focus on surgical quality Impact • 30 million major j operations p in US annually y • Patients who experience a postoperative complication have dramatically increased hospital length of stay, hospital costs, and mortality – Odds of dying within 60 days increases 3.4fold in patients with a complication* *Silber JH, et al. Changes in prognosis after the first postoperative complication. Med Care. 2005;43:122-131. Who Pays for Surgical Complications? Hospital Reimbursement $ Costs of care $ Profit $ Profit margin % 14266 (uncomplicated) 10978 3288 23.0 21911 (complicated) 21156 755 3.4 Complications p were always y associated with an increase in costs to healthcare payors: complications were associated with an average increase in payment of $7,645 (54%) per patient. Dimick JB, et al. Who pays for poor surgical quality? Building a business case for quality improvement. J Am Coll Surg. 2006;202:933-7. 17 Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) • Preventable Complication Modules – Surgical infection prevention – Cardiovascular complication prevention – Venous thromboembolism prevention Odds of Death after First Postoperative Complication Within 60 days 100 92 Odds Ratio 80 60 40 21 20 19 7.3 7.2 5.1 5 4.3 4.2 2.2 0 M o aj a rc ia rd c r St e ok T DV G e le Ib s Re ra pi d ry to co m om pr e is CH F Pn m eu i on a p Se e De s si p w nd ou i e nf n io ct i Ur ry na tra ct ct fe in n io Silber JH, et al. Changes in prognosis after the first postoperative complication. Med Care. 2005;43:122-131. 18 Guidelines Available Guidelines Available 19 Guidelines Available Prevention of Venous Th Thromboembolism b b li Seventh ACCP Consensus Conference on Antithrombotic Therapy W. Geerts, chair G. Pineo J. Heit D. Bergqvist M. Lassen C. Colwell J. Ray Chest 2004;126:338S-400S 39 CLASS I 1. Beta blockers should be continued in patients undergoing surgery who are receiving beta blockers to treat angina, symptomatic arrhythmias, hypertension, or other ACC/AHA class I guideline indications. (Level of Evidence: C) 2. Beta blockers should be given to patients undergoing vascular surgery who are at high cardiac risk owing to the finding of ischemia on preoperative testing. (Level of Evidence: B) 20 Gaps in Performance Antibiotic Timing Related to Incision Bratzler DW, Houck PM, et al. Arch Surg. 2005;140:174-182. Gaps in Performance Discontinuation of Antibiotics 100 100 90.7 88 85.8 79.5 80 73 3 73.3 60 60 50.7 40.7 40 40 26.2 22.6 14.5 20 Cumulative Percent Percent 80 20 10 6.2 93 9.3 6.3 2.7 2.2 0 96 > 496 >8 284 >7 072 >6 860 >4 648 >3 436 >2 224 >1 12 or l es s 0 Hours After Surgery End Time Patients were excluded from the denominator of this performance measure if there was any documentation of an infection during surgery or in the first 48 hours after surgery. Bratzler DW, Houck PM, et al. Arch Surg. 2005;140:174-182. 21 SCIP Steering Committee • • • • • American College of Surgeons American Hospital Association American Society of Anesthesiologists Association of peri-Operative Registered Nurses Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality • • • • • Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Department of Veteran’s Affairs Institute for Healthcare Improvement Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations Collaborating organizations essential to initial hospital and physician recruitment! Technical Expert Panels for all Modules 22 Reporting Hospitals (Voluntary) Surgical Care Improvement Project 4000 “Proposed” CMS rule suggested that hospitals needed to start reporting antibiotic measures in January to avoid losing 2% of their Medicare annual payment update. Final rule did not require reporting until July 2006. 3500 # Hospitals 3000 3670 3668 3720 3680 3247 3240 2500 2000 1492 1500 1623 1718 1297 1000 808 500 237 265 271 337 470 894 450 42 30 0 02 20 3 Q 02 20 4 Q 03 20 1 Q 03 20 2 Q 03 20 3 Q 03 20 4 Q 04 20 1 Q 04 20 2 Q 04 20 3 Q 04 20 4 Q 05 20 1 Q 05 20 2 Q 05 20 3 Q 05 20 4 Q 06 20 1 Q 06 20 2 Q 06 20 3 Q 06 20 4 Q 07 20 1 Q 07 20 2 Q Changes in National Performance Abx 60 min 100 Guideline Abx Abx discontinued 93 7 93.7 92.6 90 87.6 Percent 80 82.9 70 60 55.7 50 40 40.7 30 // 2001* Q1 2005 Q2 2005 Q3 2005 Q4 2005 Q1 2006 Q2 2006 Q3 2006 Q4 2006 Q1 2007 Q2 2007 *National sample of 39,000 Medicare patients undergoing surgery in US hospitals during 2001. Bratzler DW, Houck PM, et al. Arch Surg. 2005;140:174-182. 23 Changes in National Performance Recommended VTE prophylaxis VTE prophylaxis received 100 Percent 90 82.4 84.1 84.8 79.6 80.5 Q1 2007 Q2 2007 80 77.8 71.9 70 69.7 // 60 Q1, 2005* Q2 2006 Q3 2006 Q4 2006 *National sample of 19,497 Medicare patients undergoing surgery in US hospitals during the first quarter of 2005. Surgical Care Improvement Project Hospital Voluntary Self-Reporting, Qtr. 2, 2007 National Average* 99.5 98.6 100 Benchmark 87 6 87.6 82.9 100 98.8 97.4 93.7 99.3 93.7 85 81.2 Percent 80 60 40 20 0 Antibiotics w/in 1 hour Correct Antibiotic Antibiotic DCed Glucose Control w/in 24 hours (cardiac) No Razor Normothermia Benchmark rates were calculated for all HQA reporting hospitals in the US based on discharges using the Achievable Benchmarks of CareTM methodology (http://main.uab.edu/show.asp?durki=14527). Based on approximately 266,202 cases submitted to the clinical data warehouse. 24 Surgical Care Improvement Project Hospital Voluntary Self-Reporting, Qtr. 2, 2007 National Average* Benchmark 99.7 100 98.6 85.7 97.2 84.8 80.5 Percent 80 60 40 20 0 Perioperative Beta-blockers Recommended VTE Prophylaxis Timely VTE Prophylaxis Benchmark rates were calculated for all HQA reporting hospitals in the US based on discharges using the Achievable Benchmarks of CareTM methodology (http://main.uab.edu/show.asp?durki=14527). Based on approximately 266,202 cases submitted to the clinical data warehouse. Surgical Care Improvement Project Hospital Voluntary Self-Reporting, Qtr. 2, 2007 Low performers 99.5 98.6 100 Benchmark 100 98.8 97.4 99.3 77.8 80 Percent 66.1 60 55.5 55.6 51.3 38.9 40 20 0 Antibiotics w/in 1 hour Correct Antibiotic Antibiotic DCed Glucose Control w/in 24 hours (cardiac) No Razor Normothermia Benchmark rates were calculated for all HQA reporting hospitals in the US based on discharges using the Achievable Benchmarks of CareTM methodology (http://main.uab.edu/show.asp?durki=14527). 25 Surgical Care Improvement Project Hospital Voluntary Self-Reporting, Qtr. 2, 2007 Low performers Benchmark 99.7 100 98.6 97.2 Percent 80 60 51.7 54.6 48.6 40 20 0 Perioperative Beta-blockers Recommended VTE Prophylaxis Timely VTE Prophylaxis Benchmark rates were calculated for all HQA reporting hospitals in the US based on discharges using the Achievable Benchmarks of CareTM methodology (http://main.uab.edu/show.asp?durki=14527). Do Process Measures Matter? “Hospital performance measures predict small differences in hospital risk-adjusted mortality rates.” 26 Outcomes Measures 0 5 Hospital density 10 15 20 25 Risk-stratified Mortality - Pneumonia 0.1 0.15 0.20 30-day risk-standardized mortality rate 0.25 Risk-standardized mortality rates for the 4,684 hospitals are based on the administrative claims using data for 449,296 Medicare patients discharged during calendar year 2000 (Bratzler DW, et al. in review). Are There “Unintended Consequences” • The incentives used to stimulate and accelerate l t quality lit iimprovementt may resultlt in inappropriate care and even patient harm because of efforts to achieve high performance rates – Direct harm – Indirect harm 27 Unintended Consequences? Antibiotics within 4 hours of hospital arrival Do emergency physicians change the way they address patient care solely for the purposes of getting the hospital a high score on a measure? Levofloxacin 750 mg Attention: if you have cough, fever, or shortness of breath, OR if you think you have pneumonia, take one and have a seat. More patients in 2005 had a hospital admission diagnosis of CAP without radiographic abnormalities compared to 2003 (2005, [28.5%]; 2003, [20.6%]; p 0.04), and more patients received antibiotics within 4 h of triage (2005, [65.8%]; 2003, [53.8%]; p 0.007). 28 Arch Intern Med. 2008;168:351-356. Reduction in the required time to first antibiotic dose from 8 to 4 hours seems to reduce the accuracy by which ED physicians diagnose pneumonia…. In a rural hospital 15 cases of severe CDAD developed – 12 of the patients were being treated with antibiotics for pneumonia (started and not stopped). Independent chart review revealed that 6 of the 12 patients did not have clinical findings consistent with pneumonia. 5 patients died! 29 Unintended Consequences Indirect Harm • Caregivers shift attention to those conditions that are subject to payment incentives – e.g., triage pneumonia patients in preference to abdominal pain patients – Focusing on glucose control in a diabetic patient while ignoring their hyperlipidemia – Reallocating resources to excel on measures with payment p y incentives – Risk avoidance – turn away high risk patients (has been a concern of reporting measures of hospital mortality) “teaching to the test” How do we avoid unintended consequences? • While “perfect” care is desirable even in the best systems, systems errors occur – “perfect” care assumes “perfect” measures • The measure specifications for many measures address the most common reasons for exclusion, exclusion but rarely address every possible clinical scenario While the target rate of performance for most measures may be very high, it is not (and should not be) 100%! 30 Surgical Care Improvement Project: Why the effort? We could p prevent up p to: 13,027 perioperative deaths 271,055 surgical complications ….in the Medicare population alone * Major surgical cases Patient Outcomes Can Improve The overall surgical infection rate fell 27%, from 2.28% (215 infections among 9435 surgical cases) in the first 3 months to 1.65% (158 infections among 9584 cases) between the first and the last 3 reporting months. Dellinger EP, et al. Am J Surg.2005;190:9–15. 31 Ongoing Improvement • Nearly 4,000 hospitals reporting data • National N ti l SCIP lilistt serve with ith more th than 2,500 active participants – One of the most active list serves with very active participation of many nurses, physicians, and performance improvement managers – Barrier of competition between providers not evident – free sharing of tools and improvement ideas Quality Improvement and Performance Measurement: Dale W. Bratzler, DO, MPH QIOSC Medical Director Oklahoma Foundation for Medical Quality Presentation at the 2007 American College of Chest Physicians meeting, Chicago, IL. 32 Measuring Hospital Quality • The Good: guideline adherence has improved – Better outcomes are documented • The Bad: Use of performance measurement for accountability (particularly P4P) is largely unstudied – Calls for caution in assuming incentives lead to better care or outcomes • The Ugly: Are there unintended consequences? – The target is high….. But, in the absence of “perfect” measures, is not 100% [email protected] 33
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