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hospital-acquired infections in pennsylvania - Pennsylvania Health PDF

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H - ospital acquired i nfections p in ennsylvania calendar year 2006 Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council April 2008 The Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council (PHC4) was established as an independent state agency by the General Assembly and the Governor of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania in 1986. To help improve the quality and restrain the cost of health care, PHC4 promotes health care competition through the collection, analysis and public dissemination of uniform cost and quality-related information. t c able of ontents report HigHligHts ........................................................................................1 reader’s guide ................................................................................................2 calendar year 2006 data statewide ....................................................................................................10 peer Group 1.............................................................................................11 peer Group 2.............................................................................................19 peer Group 3.............................................................................................29 peer Group 4.............................................................................................45 comparison of quarter 4 data - cy 2005 & cy 2006 statewide ....................................................................................................58 peer Group 1 .............................................................................................59 peer Group 2 .............................................................................................66 peer Group 3 .............................................................................................74 peer Group 4 .............................................................................................87 Hospital-acquired infections in pennsylvania R H epoRt igHligHts • This report includes information on infections that were contracted by patients in Pennsyl- vania hospitals in 2006. It is the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Containment Council’s second hospital-specific report on these types of infections. • Data on hospital-acquired infections is provided for each of Pennsylvania’s 165 general acute care hospitals. Because not all hospitals treat the same types of patients, they were catego- rized by “peer groups” so that hospitals that offer similar types and complexity of services and treat similar numbers of patients are displayed together. • In 2006, hospitals reported that 30,237 patients contracted an infection during their hos- pitalization, a rate of 19.2 per 1,000 cases. This rate is higher than the 12.2 per 1,000 cases reported in 2005 due, in large part, to an expansion in the hospital-acquired infection report- ing categories and improved reporting by hospitals as the process became more established. • Differences in mortality, length of stay, and average hospital charges can be observed between patients with hospital-acquired infections and those without, as shown in the table below. The differences in mortality, length of stay, and charges may not be entirely attributable to the infections. The degree to which the presence of hospital-acquired infections influenced these numbers is not known. In almost all cases, hospitals do not receive full reimbursement of charges; on average statewide in 2006, for all inpatient cases (not just infections), hospitals were paid approximately 27% of established charges. Average Length Infection Mortality of Stay in Days Average Charge Number Rate of Cases Per 1,000 Number Percent Mean Median Mean Median Total Cases 1,574,170 NA 36,119 2.3 4.7 3.0 $36,001 $18,900 Cases with a hospital- acquired infection 30,237 19.2 3,716 12.3 19.3 14.0 $175,964 $79,670 Cases without a hospital- acquired infection 1,543,933 NA 32,403 2.1 4.4 3.0 $33,260 $18,538 • The expansion of hospital-acquired infection reporting requirements from 2005 to 2006 re- stricts the comparisons that can be made between the two years; however, some limited com- parative data is included in the report for the two most similar data collection time periods: Quarter 4, 2005 and Quarter 4, 2006. The hospital-acquired infection rate decreased from 16.3 per 1,000 cases to 15.1 per 1,000 cases between these two time periods. The number of hospital-acquired infections decreased from 6,226 in Quarter 4, 2005 to 5,859 in Quarter 4, 2006. (“Quarter 4” represents the time period October 1 through December 31.) • The collection and reporting of hospital-acquired infections is still evolving. PHC4 believes the most important use of the report is to measure individual hospital performance over time and as a tool to ask physicians and hospital representatives informed questions about infec- tion control and prevention, rather than to compare hospitals to each other. Hospital-acquired infections in pennsylvania •  R ’ g eadeR s uide Hospital-acquired infections have As Pennsylvania was the first state in the emerged as one of the most important pub- nation to report this information, there is lic health challenges over the past few years. little, if any, comparative information by The Pennsylvania Health Care Cost Con- which one can evaluate infection patterns tainment Council (PHC4) contributed to and trend data. In addition to reporting the body of knowledge all four quarters of the about the significant im- most recent data – A hospital-acquired infection pact of these infections calendar year 2006, this is an infection that a patient when it began publicly report provides some contracts while hospitalized. reporting actual state- limited comparative At the time of admission, the wide numbers in July information by infection would not have been 2005. displaying the two most either present or developing. Hospital-acquired similar data collection infections represent a time periods: Quarter direct threat to patient safety and health care 4, 2005 and Quarter 4, 2006. Over time, quality. Hospital-acquired infections, in the Pennsylvania’s reports will be able to provide aggregate, have a significant overall impact more detailed comparative information upon the cost of care, as well as on patient as part of a broader process of evaluating care outcomes and should not be dismissed interventions and best practices in order to as an inevitable risk. prevent and control infections. Currently, This publication, which is PHC4’s however, this cannot be accomplished by second hospital-specific report, can be useful comparing the entirety of calendar years for health care consumers and purchasers in 2005 and 2006, due to the expansion of evaluating the quality of care, and for hospi- reporting requirements over that time tals and clinicians in improving the quality period, as well as improvements in hospital of care. It also can help initiate discussions reporting. between patients and their doctors and How to use the report nurses, and serve as a tool among hospital providers about what needs to be done to This report should be used to measure eliminate infections and improve health care individual hospital performance over time, quality. rather than to compare hospitals to each It is important to point out that the other. It should be used as a tool to ask collection and reporting of hospital- physicians and hospital representatives in- acquired infection data is still evolving. formed questions, especially about infection Hospital Comments Hospital comments about this report can be very insightful to consumers as they use the information in this report to engage in discussions with their doctors and nurses. Copies of these comments are available on the PHC4 Web site at www.phc4.org.  • Hospital-acquired infections in pennsylvania R ’ g eadeR s uide control and prevention. It is not intended tal-acquired infection was $24,027, while to be the sole source of information in mak- the median total payment for a case without ing decisions about hospital care, nor should one was $5,440. The payment figures do it be used to generalize about the overall not include Medicare or Medicaid. quality of care provided by hospitals. The It is important to note that the degree measurement of quality is highly complex, to which the presence of hospital-ac- and the information used to capture such quired infections influenced these num- measures is limited. bers is unknown. Some of the differences Within this report, differences in mor- in mortality, lengths of stay and charges may tality, length of stay and hospital charges be influenced by other factors, including can be observed among patients with and the complex medical needs of the patient without a hospital-acquired infection. For that necessitated hospitalization. Hospitals example, the mortality rate for patients with and physicians may do everything right and a hospital-acquired infection was 12.3%, still, a hospital death or complication can be while the mortality rate for patients without an unavoidable consequence of a patient’s a hospital-acquired infection was 2.1%. The medical condition. Where hospital charges mean length of stay for patients with a hos- are concerned, in almost all cases, hospitals pital-acquired infection was 19.3 days, while do not receive full charges from private the mean length of stay for patients without insurance carriers or government payors. In a hospital-acquired infection was 4.4 days. fact, on an average basis, across all inpatient The median length of stay for patients with hospital cases statewide (not just infection a hospital-acquired infection was 14.0 days, cases), hospitals are reimbursed or paid for while the median length of stay for patients approximately 27% of established charges.* without a hospital-acquired infection was Several studies published in the Novem- 3.0 days. The mean total hospital charge ber 2006 issue of the American Journal of for patients with a hospital-acquired infec- Medical Quality challenged the idea that tion was $175,964, while the mean for infections are driven primarily by patient those patients without such infections was risk factors or severity of illness levels, as $33,260. The median total hospital charge opposed to improper hand hygiene or other for patients with a hospital-acquired infec- inconsistencies in the best practice applica- tion was $79,670, while the median for tions of infection prevention and control. those patients without such infections was One study in particular (Johannes et al., $18,538. The mean total commercial insur- 2006) concluded that the variations in mor- ance payment for a case with a hospital- tality, length of hospitalization, and hospital acquired infection was $51,096, while the charges observed in the 2004 hospital-ac- mean total payment for a case without one quired infection data could not be explained was $9,181. The median total commercial by differences in severity of illness. While insurance payment for a case with a hospi- the additional mortality, length of stay, * The statewide/regional revenue-to-charge ratios are derived from the annual net inpatient revenue and inpatient charges provided by each hospital as part of their annual financial filings to PHC4. Hospital-acquired infections in pennsylvania •  R ’ g eadeR s uide and additional charges for patients with a and to give readers, as much as possible, hospital-acquired infection as compared to an “apples-to-apples” comparison between patients without a hospital-acquired infec- the two years of data. The reader should tion may not be entirely attributable to not make any direct comparisons of overall those infections, it is reasonable to assume numbers, or draw conclusions about the that infections are a contributing factor to reported differences because 2006 was the these differences. The debate over the role first year in which all hospital-acquired of risk factors in the contraction of a hospi- infections were required to be reported to tal-acquired infection is certain to continue, PHC4. and further study is warranted. The first report released in November 2006 represented a snapshot of activity over Preventing hospital-acquired a one-year period (calendar year 2005). It infections included hospital-acquired infections identi- fied, confirmed and submitted by Pennsyl- Many hospital-acquired infections can vania hospitals for the following categories: be prevented. There are simple and effective central line-associated bloodstream infec- methods that can dramatically reduce the tions, ventilator-associated pneumonia, incidence of hospital-acquired infections: indwelling catheter-associated urinary tract hand washing; using gloves and properly infections and surgical site infections for cir- sterilized equipment; and following evi- culatory, neurological and orthopedic pro- denced-based best practices every time, all cedures. For the third and fourth quarters the time, for procedures like the insertion of of 2005, the surgical site infection category an intravenous catheter to deliver fluids and was expanded to include all surgical proce- medication. dures. For the fourth quarter of 2005, the Patients also can play a role by becoming pneumonia, bloodstream and urinary tract informed consumers and advocates for stel- infection categories were expanded to in- lar care. Wash your hands. Make sure your clude hospital-acquired infections that were health care providers and hospital visitors not device-related. As of January 2006, have washed theirs as well. And ask ques- the phase-in of reporting requirements was tions of your doctors and hospital about complete, and Pennsylvania hospitals were their infection control processes. required to submit data on all hospital-ac- quired infections to PHC4. What’s different about this report and With this second report, PHC4 had why? originally intended to show the most This is Pennsylvania’s second hospital- current one-year period of data (calendar specific report on hospital-acquired infec- year 2006). However, since it was likely tions. The format of this second report has that readers would compare 2005 to 2006 been modified due to changes in hospital totals which cannot be done because of reporting requirements from 2005 to 2006 the phased-in reporting requirements, the  • Hospital-acquired infections in pennsylvania R ’ g eadeR s uide decision was made to essentially create two redefined a two-character data field (Field reports in one. 21d) on the Pennsylvania Uniform Claims Hospital-specific information for all and Billing Form, which is submitted along of 2006 is presented in one section, while with administrative and billing data for a comparison of each hospital’s Quarter each inpatient hospital admission. Hospital 4, 2005 and Quarter 4, 2006 numbers is personnel enter one of a defined set of codes displayed in another. Quarter 4, 2005 and into this field when the relevant hospital-ac- Quarter 4, 2006 are the two quarters for quired infection is present. which the reporting requirements were the Hospitals differ in terms of the volume most alike. Still, the Council has repeat- and types of care provided, and the com- edly stressed that trending over time, and pleteness of infection reporting may vary not a single one-year snapshot, will be most across hospitals and maybe even within the instructive because the ultimate goal shared same hospital. For example, a low number by all is the reduction in occurrence of these of infections reported by a hospital could infections. mean that it is doing an excellent job in reducing its infection rate and ensuring Data Issues patient safety. On the other hand, it could indicate the hospital is underreporting its PHC4 does not use billing data to infection numbers to PHC4. Conversely, identify hospital-acquired infections; the a hospital with a high number of infections hospital-acquired infections listed were might appear to be less effective at patient identified, confirmed and submitted by safety. Yet, in reality, it may be doing a Pennsylvania hospitals. To define a hospi- very good job of identifying and report- tal-acquired infection, PHC4 adopted the ing infections. Hospitals using electronic Centers for Disease Control and Prevention surveillance approaches may report higher (CDC) definition: an infection is a local- numbers for this reason, and these hospitals ized or systemic condition that 1) results from are noted in the report. adverse reaction to the presence of an infectious Pennsylvania hospitals are making every agent(s) or its toxin(s) and 2) was not present effort to comply with the hospital-acquired or incubating at the time of admission to the infection reporting requirements; however, hospital. In simple terms, patients did not some data submission disparities among have it when they entered the hospital, and hospitals still exist, and some underreport- they contracted it while they were there. ing may be occurring. During the past two PHC4 also adopted, with minor adjust- years, PHC4 has undertaken a series of in- ments, the CDC’s 13 major site categories dependent audits of Pennsylvania hospitals that define the hospital-acquired infection to evaluate the accuracy of the reporting, location, and expanded the list of 13 to and the most recent audits have demonstrat- include a category for multiple infections ed noticeable improvement. and to differentiate device related and non-device related infections. PHC4 then Hospital-acquired infections in pennsylvania •  R ’ g eadeR s uide Interpreting the numbers numbers of patients are displayed together. The debate about the relationship of The national discussion regarding the patient risk factors and characteristics to public reporting of hospital-acquired infec- hospital-acquired infections will certainly tion data has included an ongoing debate continue, and PHC4 intends to follow and about how, or whether, to risk-adjust this contribute to this dialogue. information. That is, should patient charac- teristics, including the presence of other dis- • Cases included in the report eases or conditions, along with how ill the This report includes information on patient is, be considered when analyzing the 1,574,170 patients treated in the 165 data? PHC4’s Technical Advisory Group Pennsylvania general acute care hospitals has had discussion and has looked at de- during calendar year 2006. Information tailed data analysis in considering this issue was provided on cases for which the hos- of risk-adjustment. One argument against pital was required to report hospital-ac- risk-adjusting hospital-acquired infection quired infections, which includes patients data is that we should all strive toward the that were at least two years old and were goal of zero hospital-acquired infections. hospitalized for reasons other than mental The reporting of actual numbers, rather disorders or alcohol and drug related dis- than risk-adjusted numbers, highlights orders. Patients that were hospitalized for actual results and encourages root cause an organ transplant, complications of an analysis of every patient who contracted an organ transplant, and/or burn treatment infection while in the hospital. were not included in the report. For purposes of this report, PHC4 is pre- senting actual numbers of infections. The • Measures reported report does recognize that certain patients The following information is presented may be at greater risk for the development for cases in the report: of infections, including patients being Number of Cases – The number of cases treated for burns, undergoing organ trans- with infections represents the hospital-ac- plants, or being treated for complications quired infections identified and reported of an organ transplant. These patients are by the hospital. excluded from the report because they are at a significantly greater risk of acquiring an Infection Rate – This is the rate of infec- infection while in a hospital. It would be tion per 1,000 cases. The rate is based on unfair to list hospitals specializing in these the number of patients for which hospitals conditions alongside those who treat few or were required to report hospital-acquired no patients with these conditions if these infections, with one exception. For surgi- cases were included. PHC4 also decided cal site infections, only patients undergo- to present the data by hospital peer groups, ing surgical procedures were included. in which hospitals that offer similar types Mortality – The number and percent of and complexity of services and treat similar  • Hospital-acquired infections in pennsylvania R ’ g eadeR s uide mortality represents the number/percent hospital is actually reimbursed. Generally, of patients who died during the hospital- hospitals do not receive full reimburse- ization. It is important to note that the ment of charges because insurance compa- cause of death may not have been related nies and other large purchasers of health to the hospital-acquired infection. care usually negotiate large discounts. Mean and Median Length of Stay and • Understanding how like hospitals are grouped together (peer groups) Hospital Charge – Both the mean and the median are averages. The mean length The four peer groups identified in this of stay represents the number of days a report were developed to assist the reader patient would have been in the hospital, in recognizing “like” hospitals. Hospitals if all patients had an equal length of stay. were grouped according to the complexity The mean charge represents the amount of services offered, the number of pa- that a patient would have been charged for tients treated, and the percent of surgical their hospital care, if all the patients had procedures performed. Unlike the first equal charges. The mean is the measure report, hospitals using electronic hospital- most often referred to as the average. acquired infection surveillance were not The median length of stay represents the separated out from their respective peer midpoint of all the lengths of stay for group; they were, however, noted as using all patients in a particular hospital. In electronic surveillance. other words, half of the stays are longer Peer Group 1 includes hospitals that in length than the median and half are provide more complex services and treat shorter in length than the median. The a larger number of patients than Peer median charge represents the midpoint of Groups 2, 3, and 4. Hospitals that are all charges for all the patients in a particu- designated as trauma centers were includ- lar hospital. In other words, half of the ed in this group. All of the hospitals in charges are more than the median and half Peer Group 1 perform open-heart surgery. are less than the median. Both the mean They treat an average of 25,430 patients and the median include extreme values, a year. On average, 39 percent of these also known as outliers. Because outliers patients undergo surgical procedures. have more of an effect on the mean than the median, the mean offers greater insight Peer Group 2 includes hospitals that regarding the presence of extreme lengths provide more complex services and treat of stay or charges. On the other hand, the a larger number of patients than Peer median offers greater insight into mid- Groups 3 and 4. All of the hospitals in range lengths of stay or charges. Peer Group 2 perform open-heart surgery. They treat an average of 11,000 patients Neither mean nor median hospital charges a year. On average, 34 percent of these include professional fees (e.g., physician patients undergo surgical procedures. fees) and do not reflect the amount that a Hospital-acquired infections in pennsylvania •  R ’ g eadeR s uide Peer Group 3 includes hospitals that Electronic surveillance systems assist in treat a larger number of patients than Peer reviewing laboratory, pharmaceutical, and Group 4. They treat an average of 7,400 radiology information. Because the data is patients a year. On average, 24 percent of available in real time, facilities can reduce these patients undergo surgical procedures. preventable infections, improve safety, decrease costs, and report infections more Peer Group 4 hospitals treat an average accurately. of 1,950 patients a year. On average, 18 During the period covered by this report, percent of these patients undergo surgical 13 hospitals were using a form of electronic procedures. surveillance software for at least one quar- ter to identify hospital-acquired infections. The role of electronic surveillance The extent to which a hospital utilizes their Infection surveillance is the process used electronic surveillance software to submit within hospitals to identify those patients hospital-acquired infection data to PHC4 who might either have entered the hospital varies. Some facilities may use the electron- with an infection or who may have acquired ic surveillance software as a screening tool an infection while hospitalized, as well as only. That is, cases flagged by the electronic to assess disease outbreaks that might occur surveillance software as having a potential within a health care facility. Traditional hospital-acquired infection are reviewed infection surveillance is a time-consuming by an infection control professional, who process; infection control staff must review makes the final determination of whether or numerous reports generated by different not a hospital-acquired infection is present. departments within the hospital in order to Hospitals using electronic surveillance identify hospital-acquired infections, infec- software were listed in their respective peer tion trends, and other issues. As a result, group. These facilities were identified with “targeted” surveillance has often been used. a notation made for the first quarter in Over the last several years, hospitals have which the electronic surveillance software started to consider how the surveillance was used. This notation was made to alert process can be automated to assist infec- the reader that in the instances where higher tion control professionals in this important numbers of infections were reported, this job. Electronic surveillance systems enable may be due to more comprehensive report- integration of data from multiple depart- ing, and not that these hospitals have, in ments, assist in fast identification of patients reality, a higher infection rate than facilities with an infection or at risk for an infection, not using such strategies. Over time, it will and improve the productivity of the infec- become clearer as to whether differences tion control staff, thus allowing greater time reported are due to higher infection rates or for professional and patient education on better identification and reporting of infec- infection prevention. tions.  • Hospital-acquired infections in pennsylvania

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second hospital-specific report on these types of infections. • Data on the most important use of the report is to measure individual hospital performance over time . provided by each hospital as part of their annual financial filings to PHC4.
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