Keywords

health care quality indicators, medicare, sepsis, sepsis bundle compliance

 

Authors

  1. Rodriguez-Homs, Larissa G.
  2. Masoud, Sabran J.
  3. Mosca, Matthew J.
  4. Jawitz, Oliver K.
  5. O'Brien, Cara
  6. Mosca, Paul J.

Abstract

ABSTRACT: This retrospective, cross-sectional study of U.S. hospitals in Medicare's Inpatient Quality Reporting Program aimed to determine whether variation in Sepsis/Septic Shock (Bundle SEP-1) compliance is linked to hospital size and measures of safety and operational efficiency. Two thousand six hundred and fifty-three acute care hospitals in Medicare's Hospital Compare online database were included in the study. Relationships between SEP-1 bundle compliance, hospital size, and indices of operational excellence (including Patient Safety Index [PSI-90], average length of stay [ALOS] and readmission rate) were analyzed. SEP-1 compliance score was inversely associated with staffed bed number (r = -.14, p < .001), PSI-90 (r = -.01, p < .001), and ALOS (r = -.13, p < .001) in a multivariate analysis. Hospitals in the lowest versus highest quartile by bed number had SEP-1 compliance score of 49.8 +/- 20.2% versus 46.9 +/- 16.8%, p < .001. Hospitals in the lowest versus highest quartile for SEP-1 score had an ALOS of 5.0 +/- 1.2 days versus 4.7 +/- 1.1 days and PSI-90 rate of 1.03 +/- 0.22 versus 0.98 +/- 0.16, p < .001 for both. Although this does not establish a causal relationship, it supports the hypothesis that the ability of hospitals to successfully implement SEP-1 is associated with superior performance in key measures of operational excellence.