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Erschienen in: Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery 10/2010

01.10.2010 | 2010 SSAT Plenary Presentation

Comparison of Outlier Identification Methods in Hospital Surgical Quality Improvement Programs

verfasst von: Karl Y. Bilimoria, Mark E. Cohen, Ryan P. Merkow, Xue Wang, David J. Bentrem, Angela M. Ingraham, Karen Richards, Bruce L. Hall, Clifford Y. Ko

Erschienen in: Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery | Ausgabe 10/2010

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Abstract

Background

Surgeons and hospitals are being increasingly assessed by third parties regarding surgical quality and outcomes, and much of this information is reported publicly. Our objective was to compare various methods used to classify hospitals as outliers in established surgical quality assessment programs by applying each approach to a single data set.

Methods

Using American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program data (7/2008–6/2009), hospital risk-adjusted 30-day morbidity and mortality were assessed for general surgery at 231 hospitals (cases = 217,630) and for colorectal surgery at 109 hospitals (cases = 17,251). The number of outliers (poor performers) identified using different methods and criteria were compared.

Results

The overall morbidity was 10.3% for general surgery and 25.3% for colorectal surgery. The mortality was 1.6% for general surgery and 4.0% for colorectal surgery. Programs used different methods (logistic regression, hierarchical modeling, partitioning) and criteria (P < 0.01, P < 0.05, P < 0.10) to identify outliers. Depending on outlier identification methods and criteria employed, when each approach was applied to this single dataset, the number of outliers ranged from 7 to 57 hospitals for general surgery morbidity, 1 to 57 hospitals for general surgery mortality, 4 to 27 hospitals for colorectal morbidity, and 0 to 27 hospitals for colorectal mortality.

Conclusions

There was considerable variation in the number of outliers identified using different detection approaches. Quality programs seem to be utilizing outlier identification methods contrary to what might be expected, thus they should justify their methodology based on the intent of the program (i.e., quality improvement vs. reimbursement). Surgeons and hospitals should be aware of variability in methods used to assess their performance as these outlier designations will likely have referral and reimbursement consequences.
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Metadaten
Titel
Comparison of Outlier Identification Methods in Hospital Surgical Quality Improvement Programs
verfasst von
Karl Y. Bilimoria
Mark E. Cohen
Ryan P. Merkow
Xue Wang
David J. Bentrem
Angela M. Ingraham
Karen Richards
Bruce L. Hall
Clifford Y. Ko
Publikationsdatum
01.10.2010
Verlag
Springer-Verlag
Erschienen in
Journal of Gastrointestinal Surgery / Ausgabe 10/2010
Print ISSN: 1091-255X
Elektronische ISSN: 1873-4626
DOI
https://doi.org/10.1007/s11605-010-1316-6

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