Discordance between surgical care improvement project adherence and postoperative outcomes: implications for new Joint Commission standards

作者:Chang Victor; Blackwell Robert H; Markossian Talar; Yau Ryan M; Blanco Barbara A; Zapf Matthew A C; Abood Gerard J; Gupta Gopal N; Kuo Paul C*; Kothari Anai N
来源:Journal of Surgical Research, 2017, 212: 205-213.
DOI:10.1016/j.jss.2017.01.006

摘要

Background: Infectious (INF) and venous thromboembolism (VTE) complication rates are targeted by surgical care improvement project (SCIP) INF and SCIP VTE measures. We analyzed how adherence to SCIP INF and SCIP VTE affects targeted postoperative outcomes (wound complication[WC], deepvein thrombosis, and pulmonary embolism[PE]) using all-payer data. Materials and methods: A retrospective review (2007-2011) was conducted using Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project State Inpatient Database Florida and Medicare's Hospital Compare. The association between SCIP adherence rates and outcomes across 355 included surgical procedures was measured using multilevel mixed-effects linear regression models. Results: One hundred sixty acute care hospitals and 779,922 patients were included. Over 5 y, SCIP INF-1, -2, and -3 adherence improved by 12.5%, 8.0%, and 20.9%, respectively, whereas postoperative WC rate decreased by 14.8%. When controlling for time, SCIP INF-1 adherence was associated with improvement of postoperative WC rates (beta = -0.0044, P = 0.005), whereas SCIP INF-2 adherence was associated with increased WCs (beta = 0.0031, P = 0.018). SCIP VTE-1, -2 adherence improved by 14.6% and 20.2%, respectively, whereas postoperative deep vein thrombosis rate increased by 7.1% and postoperative PE rate increased by 3.7%. SCIP VTE-1 and -2 adherence were both associated with increased postoperative PE when controlling for time (SCIP VTE-1: beta -0.0019, P < 0.001; SCIP VTE-2: beta = 0.0015, P < 0.001). Readmission analysis found SCIP INF-1 adherence to be associated with improved 30-d WC rates when controlling for patient and hospital characteristics (beta = -0.0021, P = 0.032), whereas SCIP INF-3 adherence was associated with increased 30-d WC rates when controlling for time (beta = 0.0007, P = 0.04). Conclusions: Only SCIP INF-1 adherence was associated with improved outcomes. The Joint Commission has retired SCIP INF-2, -3, and SCIP VTE-2 and made SCIP INF-1 and VTE-1 reporting optional. Our study supports continued reporting of SCIP INF-1.

  • 出版日期2017-5-15