Failure-to-Rescue in Thoracic Surgery - 26/07/17
Résumé |
Variability in outcomes not attributable to case mix or chance is an indicator of low-quality care. Failure-to-rescue is an outcome measure defined as death during a hospitalization among patients who experience a complication. Researchers have used this measure to better understand the determinants of an untimely death—preventing complications, rescue, or both. Studies repeatedly find that complication rates vary little, if at all, across hospitals ranked by risk-adjusted mortality rates, suggesting that hospitals are equally capable (or incapable) of preventing complications. In contrast, variation in failure-to-rescue rates seems to explain much of the variation in risk-adjusted hospital-level mortality rates. These findings suggest that system-level interventions that allow for the early detection and treatment of complications (ie, rescue) may reduce variability in hospital-level outcomes and improve the quality of thoracic surgical care.
Le texte complet de cet article est disponible en PDF.Keywords : Failure-to-rescue, Quality improvement, Thoracic surgery
Plan
| The author has nothing to disclose. |
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| Megan Zadworny, MHA assisted greatly in the preparation of this article. |
Vol 27 - N° 3
P. 257-266 - août 2017 Retour au numéroBienvenue sur EM-consulte, la référence des professionnels de santé.
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