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Comparative Study
. 2016 Apr;222(4):568-75.
doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2015.12.046. Epub 2016 Jan 14.

Transforming Patient Value: Comparison of Hospital, Surgical, and General Surgery Patients

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Comparative Study

Transforming Patient Value: Comparison of Hospital, Surgical, and General Surgery Patients

Henry A Pitt et al. J Am Coll Surg. 2016 Apr.

Abstract

Background: Patient value (V) is enhanced when quality (Q) is increased and cost (C) is diminished (V = Q/C). However, calculating value has been inhibited by a lack of risk-adjusted cost data. The aim of this analysis was to measure patient value before and after implementation of quality improvement and cost reduction programs.

Study design: Multidisciplinary efforts to improve patient value were initiated at a safety-net hospital in 2012. Quality improvement focused on adoption of multiple best practices, and minimizing practice variation was the strategy to control cost. University HealthSystem Consortium (UHC) risk-adjusted quality (patient mortality + safety + satisfaction + effectiveness) and cost (length of stay + direct cost) data were used to calculate patient value over 3 fiscal years. Normalized ranks in the UHC Quality and Accountability Scorecard were used in the value equation.

Results: For all hospital patients, quality scores improved from 50.3 to 66.5, with most of the change occurring in decreased mortality. Similar trends were observed for all surgery patients (42.6 to 48.4) and for general surgery patients (30.9 to 64.6). For all hospital patients, cost scores improved from 71.0 to 2.9. Similar changes were noted for all surgical (71.6 to 27.1) and general surgery (85.7 to 23.0) patients. Therefore, value increased more than 30-fold for all patients, 3-fold for all surgical patients, and almost 8-fold for general surgery patients.

Conclusions: Multidisciplinary quality and cost efforts resulted in significant improvements in value for all hospitalized patients as well as general surgery patients. Mortality improved the most in general surgery patients, and satisfaction was highest among surgical patients.

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  • Discussion.
    [No authors listed] [No authors listed] J Am Coll Surg. 2016 Apr;222(4):575-8. doi: 10.1016/j.jamcollsurg.2016.01.030. J Am Coll Surg. 2016. PMID: 27016985 No abstract available.

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