Hospital performance in caring for injured patients: does the type of injury make a difference?

Arch Surg. 2009 Dec;144(12):1121-6. doi: 10.1001/archsurg.2009.218.

Abstract

Objective: To determine whether quality measures based on injury-specific models provide a different perspective about relative hospital rankings compared with a single outcome measure based on all trauma patients.

Design: We customized the Trauma Mortality Probability Model to create separate injury-specific models for patients who sustained blunt trauma, gunshot wounds, pedestrian trauma, or motor vehicle accident trauma.

Setting: This analysis was conducted using the National Trauma Data Bank. We limited the study to hospitals with 250 or more trauma admissions per year, which coded more than 90% of patients.

Patients: The final data set included 54 859 patients admitted to 44 hospitals.

Main outcome measures: We performed hospital-level analyses to examine the correlation between hospital risk-adjusted mortality measures based on all trauma patients vs quality measures based on injury-specific measures.

Results: The analysis of the intraclass correlation coefficients suggests fair-to-substantial agreement (0.39-0.68) between the hospital-adjusted odds ratios based on all patients vs odds ratios based on specific injuries. kappa Analysis demonstrated poor-to-fair agreement between hospital categorical quality measures (high, intermediate, and low quality) when hospital quality was based on outcomes for all trauma patients vs specific subgroups of patients (0.0-0.38). However, none of the hospitals classified as high quality, based on data from all trauma patients, was found to be low quality for any specific injury populations.

Conclusion: A single composite measure based on all injured patients may not capture all the differences in hospital quality across different populations of injured patients.

Publication types

  • Research Support, U.S. Gov't, P.H.S.

MeSH terms

  • Accidents, Traffic*
  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Cohort Studies
  • Female
  • Hospital Mortality
  • Hospitalization*
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Registries
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Risk Adjustment
  • Trauma Centers*
  • Treatment Outcome
  • Wounds, Gunshot / mortality
  • Wounds, Gunshot / therapy*
  • Wounds, Nonpenetrating / mortality
  • Wounds, Nonpenetrating / therapy*