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

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    Authors
    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.
    UMass Chan Affiliations
    Department of Quantitative Health Sciences
    Document Type
    Journal Article
    Publication Date
    2001-06-30
    Keywords
    Aged
    Alabama
    Coronary Artery Bypass
    Female
    Hospital Mortality
    Humans
    Logistic Models
    Male
    Middle Aged
    *Outcome and Process Assessment (Health Care)
    Professional Review Organizations
    Statistics, Nonparametric
    Surgery Department, Hospital
    Survival Analysis
    *Total Quality Management
    United States
    Bioinformatics
    Biostatistics
    Epidemiology
    Health Services Research
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    Link to Full Text
    http://jama.ama-assn.org/cgi/content/abstract/285/23/3003
    Abstract
    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.
    Source
    JAMA. 2001 Jun 20;285(23):3003-10.
    Permanent Link to this Item
    http://hdl.handle.net/20.500.14038/46606
    PubMed ID
    11410099
    Related Resources
    Link to Article in PubMed
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    Population and Quantitative Health Sciences Publications

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