Patient Safety Incidents at U.S. Hospitals
show no decline, cost $9 Billion
Newswise — Nearly one million patient-safety
incidents occurred among Medicare patients
over the years 2006, 2007, 2008, a figure
virtually unchanged since last year’s annual
study of patient safety by HealthGrades, the
leading independent healthcare ratings
organization. In all, the incidents were
associated with $8.9 billion in costs. One
in ten patients -- 99,180 individuals --
experiencing a patient-safety incident died
as a result, the study found.
The seventh annual HealthGrades Patient
Safety in American Hospitals study, which
evaluated 39.5 million hospitalization
records from the nation’s nearly 5,000
nonfederal hospitals using indicators
developed by the federal Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality, tracks
trends in a range of patient safety
incidents and identifies those hospitals
that are in the top 5% in the nation.
Patients at hospitals in the top 5% -- 2010
HealthGrades Patient Safety Excellence
Award™ recipients -- experienced 43% fewer
patient safety incidents, on average,
compared to poorly performing hospitals.
If all hospitals performed at this level,
218,572 patient safety incidents and 22,590
deaths could potentially have been avoided,
saving $2.0 billion from 2006 through 2008.
The list of award recipients, and the
patient-safety ratings of all nonfederal
hospitals, can be viewed for free at
www.HealthGrades.com. Thirty-nine
states have at least one award recipient.
“This annual study serves the twin goals of
documenting the state of patient safety for
hospitals to benchmark against, and
providing individuals with objective
information with which to evaluate local
hospitals,” said Rick May, MD, a vice
president at HealthGrades and co-author of
the study.
“It is disheartening, however, to see that
the numbers have not changed since last
year’s study and, in fact, certain patient
safety incidents, such as post-operative
sepsis, are on the rise.”
Study highlights:
Large Safety Gaps Identified Between Top and
Bottom Performing Hospitals
• Patients treated at top-performing
hospitals had, on average, a 43% lower
chance of experiencing one or more medical
errors compared to the poorest-performing
hospitals.
Patient safety events are common at U.S.
hospitals
• Between 2006 and 2008 there were 958,202
total patient safety events among Medicare
beneficiaries, representing 2.29% of the
39.5 million Medicare admissions.
Common Patient Safety Events are Very Costly
• Between 2006 and 2008 these patient safety
events were associated with over $8.9
billion in excess costs.
Less Improvement Seen Among Most Common
Events
• Six patient safety indicators showed
improvement while eight indicators worsened
in 2008 compared to 2006. Some of the most
common and most serious indicators worsened,
accounting for 78.94% of the total patient
safety incidents studied. These include
decubitus ulcer (bed sores), iatrogenic
pneumothorax (collapsed lung),
post-operative hip fracture, post-operative
physiologic and metabolic derangements,
post-operative pulmonary embolism
(potentially fatal blood clots forming in
the lungs) or deep vein thrombosis (blood
clots in the legs), post-operative sepsis,
and transfusion reaction.
Approximately One
in Ten Medicare Patients with Patient Safety
Events Died
• Between 2006 and 2008 there were 99,180
actual inhospital deaths that occurred among
patients who experienced one or more of the
15 patient safety events.
Most Common Patient
Safety Incidents
• The patient safety incidents with the
highest incidence rates are, along with the
event rates per 1,000: failure to rescue
(92.71), decubitus ulcer (36.05),
post-operative respiratory failure (17.52)
and post-operative sepsis (16.53).
Methodology
The seventh annual HealthGrades Patient
Safety in American Hospitals Study applies
methodology developed by the U.S. Department
of Health and Human Services' Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to
identify the incident rates of 15 patient
safety indicators among Medicare patients at
virtually all of the nation's nearly 5,000
nonfederal hospitals. Additionally,
HealthGrades applied its methodology using
12 patient safety indicators to identify the
best-performing hospitals, or HealthGrades
Patient Safety Excellence Award™ Hospitals,
which represent the top five percent of all
U.S. hospitals.
The following are the 15 patient safety
indicators studied:
• Complications of anesthesia
• Death in low mortality Diagnostic Related
Groupings (DRGs)
• Decubitus ulcer (bed sores)
• Death among surgical inpatients with
serious treatable complications
• Iatrogenic pneumothorax
• Selected infections due to medical care
• Post-operative hip fracture
• Post-operative hemorrhage or hematoma
• Post-operative physiologic and metabolic
derangements
• Post-operative respiratory failure
• Post-operative pulmonary embolism or deep
vein thrombosis
• Post-operative sepsis
• Post-operative abdominal wound dehiscence
• Accidental puncture or laceration
• Transfusion reaction
Complete methodology can be found in the study, available
at
http://www.healthgrades.com.
About HealthGrades
Health Grades, Inc. (Nasdaq: HGRD) is the
leading independent healthcare ratings
organization, providing quality ratings,
profiles and cost information on the
nation's hospitals, physicians, nursing
homes and prescription drugs. Millions of
patients and many of the nation’s largest
employers, health plans and hospitals rely
on HealthGrades’ quality ratings, advisory
services and decision-support resources.
The HealthGrades Network of Web sites,
including HealthGrades.com and
WrongDiagnosis.com, is a top-ten health
property according to comScore and is the
Internet's leading destination for patients
choosing providers.
More information on how HealthGrades guides
America to better healthcare can be found at
http://www.healthgrades.com.
Editor’s note:
A full copy of the report, which lists the
hospitals receiving the HealthGrades Patient
Safety Excellence Award and complete
methodology, is available at
http://www.healthgrades.com/research or
by contacting Scott Shapiro at 720-963-6584
or
sshapiro@healthgrades.com
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