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Hospital
death rates see decade decline
Newswise — Sharp declines in the hospital
death rates of patients from heart attack
and five other leading conditions meant that
an estimated 136,000 who would have died had
they been hospitalized a decade earlier
survived their stays in 2004, according to
the latest News and Numbers from the Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality.
AHRQ compared the death rates for 1994 and
2004 for patients who were hospitalized for
heart attack, congestive heart failure,
stroke, pneumonia, gastrointestinal
hemorrhage, or hip fracture.
For every 1,000 patients admitted for their
condition:
• Heart attack deaths fell by 43; deaths
from congestive heart failure, pneumonia,
and stroke each dropped roughly 30;
• Deaths from gastrointestinal hemorrhage
declined by 21; and
• 16 fewer died from hip fracture.
For every 1,000 patients who underwent six
surgical procedures examined:
• Abdominal aortic aneurysm repair deaths
plunged from 103 to 74;
• Deaths from craniotomy – an operation for
brain lesions and other conditions –
declined from 83 to 68;
• Deaths from heart bypass surgery fell from
48 to 28, angioplasty deaths diminished from
16 to 12, those from carotid endarterectomy
– an operation to avert stroke – fell from
12 to 7, and
• Deaths from hip replacement surgery
declined by half – from 4 to 2 per every
1,000 operations.
The death rates for the six conditions and
six surgical procedures are risk-adjusted,
meaning that AHRQ’s researchers took into
account differences in how ill patients were
over time when calculating the results.
This AHRQ News and Numbers is based on data
in Trends in Hospital Risk-Adjusted
Mortality for Select Diagnoses and
Procedures, 1994-2004. The report uses
statistics from the Nationwide Inpatient
Sample, a database of hospital inpatient
stays that is nationally representative of
inpatient stays in all short-term,
non-Federal hospitals. The data are drawn
from hospitals that comprise 90 percent of
all discharges in the United States and
include all patients, regardless of
insurance type, as well as the uninsured.
The authors used AHRQ’s Inpatient Quality
Indicators to determine the in-hospital,
risk-adjusted death rates.
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