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Hospital standardized mortality ratios published for the first time in CanadaNew quality improvement tool designed to support efforts to reduce in-hospital deaths Information on: A New Approach for Measuring Hospital Mortality Trends in Canada November 29, 2007—For the first time in Canada, hospital standardized mortality ratio (HSMR) results for eligible acute care hospitals and health regions outside Quebec are being published today in a new report by the Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI). The measure compares the actual number of deaths in a hospital or region with the average Canadian experience, after adjusting for several factors that may affect in-hospital mortality rates, such as the age, sex, diagnoses and admission status of patients. “Hospitals and health care providers are continuously looking for ways to improve quality of care for their patients,” says Graham W. S. Scott, Chair of the Board of Directors of CIHI. “The HSMR builds on this good work by providing another important tool to better understand in-hospital mortality and identify areas for improvement.” First used in the United Kingdom, the HSMR measure was adapted by CIHI for use in Canada at the request of hospitals and patient safety experts. The HSMR: A New Approach for Measuring Hospital Mortality Trends in Canada report includes HSMR results for 85 larger acute care facilities/corporations and 42 health regions outside Quebec over the last three fiscal years (2004–2005 to 2006–2007). During this period, just over 254,000 patients died in Canadian hospitals outside of Quebec. (Quebec results are not available due to historical differences in hospital data collection.) Today's report builds on earlier efforts to develop information about quality of care and patient safety in Canada. A landmark study in 2004 funded by CIHI and the Canadian Institutes of Health Research found that 7.5% of adult medical or surgical patients had adverse events in hospital, about one-third of which were deemed preventable by expert reviewers. Most patients recover within six months, but each year, between 9,250 and 23,750 Canadian adults experience a “preventable” adverse event in hospital and later die, according to the study led by Ross Baker and Peter Norton. “The HSMR is one tool for measuring and monitoring progress in patient safety. It’s a tool that can motivate change and make health care safer,” says Dr. Michael Baker, Physician-in-Chief at Toronto’s University Health Network. “HSMR numbers can be used as one measure of the quality of care, but the ratio is best used as an indicator of trends, not as a target.” In-hospital mortality rates vary by patient groupThe overall average HSMR fell by 6% over the study period (excludes patients identified by hospitals as having received palliative care), but trends vary by patient group. For example, death rates for patients with heart attacks fell faster than those for patients with pneumonia. The HSMR measure focuses on 65 diagnosis groups that account for 80% of in-hospital deaths, excluding palliative care. The five diagnoses that had the highest numbers of deaths were heart attack, heart failure, pneumonia, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease and septicemia. Age, sex and other factors related to risk of in-hospital mortalityCIHI’s analysis found that older patients, those with certain health problems in addition to their main diagnosis (such as kidney disease or AIDS), urgent/emergent admissions and men had higher odds of dying than other patients. These factors, plus the patients’ length of stay in hospital and whether or not they were transferred between hospitals, were taken into account in calculating hospital and regional HSMR results. “Some hospital patients are older or have more health problems than others,” says Glenda Yeates, CIHI’s President and CEO. “The HSMR calculation adjusts for these and other variables wherever possible, but each hospital and community is unique. No measure can take into account all possible factors that may influence the risk of dying in hospital, and as a result, HSMR results are most helpful when used by individual hospitals and health regions to track their progress over time.” HSMR: from measurement to action in Canada and abroadHospitals in the U.K. and the United States have been using HSMR results to track in-hospital mortality and target areas for improvement in the delivery of care for several years. For example, the Bradford Teaching Hospitals Trust in the U.K. reported on its experiences in the Journal of the Royal Society of Medicine last year. Its HSMR fell from 95 to 78 over four years, an improvement that the hospital estimates translates into 905 fewer deaths. Work with HSMR is also under way in several other countries, such as the Netherlands and Sweden. In Canada, hospitals and regions have begun to track their HSMR results as part of efforts to improve care. For example:
About CIHIThe Canadian Institute for Health Information (CIHI) collects and analyzes information on health and health care in Canada and makes it publicly available. Canada’s federal, provincial and territorial governments created CIHI as a not-for-profit, independent organization dedicated to forging a common approach to Canadian health information. CIHI’s goal: to provide timely, accurate and comparable information. CIHI’s data and reports inform health policies, support the effective delivery of health services and raise awareness among Canadians of the factors that contribute to good health. VideoVideo of November 29th HSMR press conference Watch the developer of the HSMR measure, Sir Brian Jarman (Imperial College, U.K.), and Joe McCannon from the Institute for Healthcare Improvement (U.S.) talk about how the HSMR has been used in their countries. Click Here.
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Page last updated November 30, 2007 |