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    Date Issued2001 (1)AuthorAllman, Richard M. (1)Anstrom, Kevin J. (1)Holman, William L. (1)Hubbard, Steve G. (1)Kiefe, Catarina I. (1)View MoreUMass Chan AffiliationDepartment of Quantitative Health Sciences (1)Document TypeJournal Article (1)Keyword*Outcome and Process Assessment (Health Care) (1)*Total Quality Management (1)Aged (1)Alabama (1)Bioinformatics (1)View MoreJournalJAMA : the journal of the American Medical Association (1)

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    Alabama coronary artery bypass grafting project: results of a statewide quality improvement initiative

    Holman, William L.; Allman, Richard M.; Sansom, Monique; Kiefe, Catarina I.; Peterson, Eric D.; Anstrom, Kevin J.; Sankey, Steadman S.; Hubbard, Steve G.; Sherrill, Robert G. (2001-06-30)
    CONTEXT: Efforts to improve quality of care in the cardiac surgery field have focused on reducing the risk-adjusted mortality associated with common surgical procedures, such as coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). However, the best methodological approach to improvement is under debate. OBJECTIVE: To test an intervention to improve performance of CABG surgery. DESIGN AND SETTING: Quality improvement project based on baseline (July 1, 1995-June 30, 1996) and follow-up (July 1-December 31, 1998) performance measurements from medical record review for all 20 Alabama hospitals that provided CABG surgery. PATIENTS: Medicare patients discharged after CABG surgery in Alabama (n = 5784), a comparison state (n = 3214), and a national sample (n = 3758). INTERVENTION: Confidential hospital-specific performance feedback and assistance with multimodal improvement interventions, including the option to share relevant experience with peers. MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Duration of intubation, reintubation rate, aspirin therapy at discharge, use of the internal mammary artery (IMA), hospital readmission rate, and risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality. RESULTS: Proportion of extubation within 6 hours increased from 9% to 41% in Alabama, decreased from 40% to 39% in the comparison state, and increased from 12% to 25% in the national sample. Use of IMA increased from 73% to 84%, 48% to 55%, and 74% to 81%, respectively, in the 3 samples, but aspirin use increased only in Alabama (from 88% to 92%). The amount of improvement in all 3 of these process measures was greater in Alabama than in the other samples (IMA use for Alabama vs comparison state was P =.001 and for Alabama vs national sample, P =.02; and P<.001 for all other comparisons). Risk-adjusted mortality decreased in Alabama (4.9% to 2.9%), but this decrease was not statistically significantly different from mortality changes in the other groups (odds ratio, 0.76; 95% confidence interval, 0.54-1.07 vs national sample). CONCLUSION: Confidential peer-based regional performance feedback and process-oriented analysis of shared experience are associated with some improvement in quality of care for patients who underwent CABG surgery.
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