{"id":2165,"date":"2013-05-24T11:57:53","date_gmt":"2013-05-24T15:57:53","guid":{"rendered":"http:\/\/www.khpi.org\/blog\/?p=2165"},"modified":"2013-06-02T20:35:31","modified_gmt":"2013-06-03T00:35:31","slug":"safety-of-louisville-hospitals-are-we-there-yet","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"http:\/\/www.khpi.org\/blog\/safety-of-louisville-hospitals-are-we-there-yet\/","title":{"rendered":"Safety of Louisville Hospitals:  Are we there yet?"},"content":{"rendered":"<p><strong><span style=\"color: #0000ff;\">Further consideration of recent Leapfrog Hospital Safety Scores.<\/span><\/strong><span style=\"color: #ff0000;\"><br \/>\n<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Earlier this month I offered a <a title=\"Leapfrog Hospital Safety Scores Released: Third Iteration.\" href=\"http:\/\/www.khpi.org\/blog\/?p=2141\" target=\"_blank\">preliminary description<\/a> of the third iteration of <a title=\"Leapfrog Hospital Safety Scores\" href=\"http:\/\/www.hospitalsafetyscore.org\" target=\"_blank\">Leapfrog&#8217;s Hospital Safety Scores<\/a> for Kentucky&#8217;s hospitals. I continued to be concerned about the large and increasing number of Kentucky Hospitals that escape evaluation, including some that should be looked at the hardest. Of the 45 hospitals that were evaluated this round, one quarter saw their scores change one way or another. Two of Louisville&#8217;s four hospital systems saw their scores fall one letter grade to as low as a D, and none received an A.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Hospital reaction and criticism.<\/span><\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> Hospitals that do well are happy. Those who do not may understandably make an effort to mitigate the adverse publicity. Jewish Hospital and St. Mary\u2019s Healthcare (which received a D) raised an objection we have heard before\u2013 that the playing field is not level. Is it true that hospitals that do not participate with Leapfrog&#8217;s proprietary and totally optional hospital survey are at a disadvantage? Leapfrog says no\u2013 hospitals are not penalized for having empty boxes in the evaluation matrix. What happens is that all the other items (mostly obtained from the Medicare Compare database) are simply counted more heavily. KentuckyOne also argued that the data on which the scores are based is outdated. \u00a0(Who is to say that newer data will not be worse \u00a0than the old!) \u00a0 I think both these arguments deserve consideration but in my opinion fail to explain the drop in scores for two Louisville Hospitals. \u00a0After all, only a <a title=\"Hospitals with Safety Scores: Categories\" href=\"http:\/\/www.khpi.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/05\/categoriesMay2013.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">handful of hospitals<\/a> in Kentucky participate with Leapfrog. Whether a hospital benefits or not probably depends more on how good their performance on the survey is. \u00a0Yes, the data on which the scores are based will probably be more that a year old, but virtually all Kentucky hospitals are in the same boat with respect to timeliness of data and Leapfrog participation. \u00a0The Kentucky playing field, at least, is pretty level! \u00a0I will provide examples from selected hospitals to illustrate this discussion.<!--more--><\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Can the complicated be made simple?<\/span><\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> Leapfrog boils down 26 separate safety factors into a single letter score but provides the underlying values for each factor on its website. Some of these come from Medicare&#8217;s Hospital Compare database, and some from Leapfrog&#8217;s own voluntary reporting system. For &#8220;non-participating&#8221; hospitals, partial credit is given for some items submitted by the American Hospital Association. These relate to computerized doctor ordering and ICU specialist staffing. However, data from this alternate source can be as old as from 2010 and there have been problems in transferring the data to Leapfrog! I prepared several tables breaking down the most recent letter scores into their underlying componants.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Categories of things measured.<\/span><\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> The individual items measured can be grouped into three major categories. The first, which includes most of the items from the proprietary Leapfrog Hospital Survey, may be called <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">administrative or structural items<\/span>. They mostly ask questions that can be addressed from a hospital&#8217;s policy binders such as, &#8220;Do you have a policy on hand hygiene in your hospital?&#8221; &#8220;Do you have a system for identifying risk or improving your workforce?&#8221; Do you have computerized order entry for physicians and other staff? Are your ICU&#8217;s staffed by qualified people 24 hours a day? One of the items, medication reconciliation, is an actual real-life test of the hospital&#8217;s pharmacy&#8217;s computer system that checks for things like adverse medication interactions. \u00a0Of course it is one thing to have policies, and another to be able to translate those into the safe and effective care we all seek. There&#8217;s the rub!<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">A second category of items are usually called <span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">&#8220;process&#8221;<\/span> elements. A hospital counts how often certain things that are thought to contribute to a good result are actually being done. For example, for some surgical operations, it has been shown that receiving an prophylactic antibiotic just before surgery is beneficial so long as the drug is stopped soon after. Therefore a hospital counts up what percent of eligible patients actually get and stop the right drug within the proper times. There are 5 process elements in the Safety Score all of which come from Medicare data. Three of them deal with antibiotics and surgery. As you might imagine, collecting information that is reliable is time consuming, expensive, and may be accomplished with more or less rigor. Just as there is occasional error or fraud in research, we have to assume data collection for process evaluation may sometimes be less than reliable or trustworthy.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">The third basic category of safety and quality measurements is &#8220;<span style=\"text-decoration: underline;\">outcome measures<\/span>.&#8221; Outcomes are the Holy Grail of quality and safety assessments. Eleven of the Safety Score elements are in this category. This is where the rubber hits the road. How may patients get their central intravenous lines infected? How many patients have their surgical wounds break open? How many get bad bedsores? You may ask, as do I, why do we even bother measuring anything else? I will let someone else answer that question.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><strong>May 2013 Data.<\/strong><br \/>\nHere is a <a title=\"May 2013 Safety Score Data for Louisville Hospitals\" href=\"http:\/\/www.khpi.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/05\/may-2013-scores.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">table breaking out the individual data items<\/a> that underly the global Safety Scores for the four hospital or systems in Louisville (and a few others that we have looked at earlier). For each of the 26 categories I indicate the &#8220;best&#8221; performance in green, and the &#8220;worst&#8221; in red. Each of the Louisville hospitals has at least one best and one worst in the show. Some hospitals are obviously doing better than others in this regard. Neither Baptist or Jewish participated with Leapfrog but they got the highest and lowest Safety Scores respectively. In a <a title=\"Louisville elements compared to national norms.\" href=\"http:\/\/www.khpi.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/05\/may-2013-averages.pdf\" target=\"_blank\">second version of the same data<\/a>, I indicate in green and red how a given hospital stands with respect to the national average numbers. The fact that there is more red than green is disappointing for a city that markets itself as a center of healthcare excellence. It seems to me we have a long way to go.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Are there 4 acute care hospitals for adults in Louisville or 8?<\/span><\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> Although they are two geographically separate hospitals, Jewish &amp; St. Mary&#8217;s hospitals are counted as a single entity because they share the same Medicare provider number. Because Norton participates with Leapfrog, it is able to breakout its four adult hospitals separately, but except for a single item at Brownsboro, all the numbers are identical, making it appear that the data from all four were presented as a single administrative unit. In my opinion, lumping does not serve the public as well as splitting.\u00a0<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Are we measuring the right things?<\/span><\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> What&#8217;s with Post-operative Respiratory failure and Air Embolism? The former has never had any data to populate it, and the latter occurs so rarely that it does not allow useful discrimination among hospitals. Why not measure something else?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Outdated data?<\/span><\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> What about the criticism that the information is outdated? There is some validity to this. The newest data included in the analysis for most of the outcome measures was June 2011, and for most of the process measurements, December 2011. The most recent data available was for central-line associated bloodstream infections which was current as of March 2012. Some of the items, particularly the outcome measures, appear to use a two-year rolling average which would tend to blunt the impact any recent increase or decrease for that item. Frankly I am not surprised that year-old data is the norm. Collecting, verifying, validating, organizing, packaging and disseminating the information is a Herculean task. The public deserves the most timely reliable information possible and I don&#8217;t doubt the Medicare folks are trying their best under a heavy statutory and regulatory burden. Addressing the fairness issue, at least all hospitals are being evaluated at the same point in time for most items. In fact, because ratings can drop, some hospitals will look better if their most recent information is not included!<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\"><strong>Change over time<\/strong>.<\/span><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> Assuming the philosophy that we would like to see our hospitals succeed in improving their service to us, I prepared a<a title=\"Changes November to May\" href=\"http:\/\/www.khpi.org\/blog\/wp-content\/uploads\/2013\/05\/may-2013-changes.pdf\" target=\"_blank\"> table comparing the current values<\/a> for the individual safety to those of last November. I was both surprised and disappointed at how few items seemed to be in play. It appears that not all elements have been updated since November\u2013 only 8 of the 26 appear to have changed! The values for the other elements, at least for our local hospitals, were identical for both times. Changes were seen for 2 structural, 5 process, but only 1 outcome measure. The process values for Norton and Baptist remained largely the same or better. Jewish and University had some elements worsen.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Baptist and Jewish both had increases in the rate of infected central intravenous catheters\u2013 the one outcome measure that varied. The infection rate at Jewish more than doubled but was still not the highest in the city. I do not know what to make of the identical rates (to four decimal places) at Norton and University. It seems mathematically improbable that there be absolutely no change. I worry that artifacts of timing and methods in the collection and reporting of data weaken the fairness and utility of the entire enterprise.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Leapfrog participation: Boon or bain?<\/span><\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> If I were the folks at KentuckyOne, I would raise the issue about Leapfrog participation too, but I do not yet know if that helps or hurts. To answer that question would require access to the entire Leapfrog database and lots of sophisticated statistics. Now that KentuckyOne Health manages both University Hospital and Jewish &amp; St Mary&#8217;s, it is going to have to decide what to do next. Will it terminate participation by University Hospital based on the arguments it expressed against participation by Jewish? Or will Jewish begin to participate in hopes of a quick bump in its score. (The operational policies at both hospitals are likely now to be very similar if not the same.) \u00a0What might we all surmise from inspection of things close to home?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Last November, University Hospital made a great leap forward from a D\/F to a B at a time when all of its process measures and several of its outcomes were still in the cellar. The most likely explanation in my opinion was that the poor process and outcome numbers were offset by the nearly perfect structural numbers resulting from University&#8217;s new participation with Leapfrog. Norton&#8217;s structural scores from Leapfrog were more middle-of-the-road, but one may reasonably wonder if they did not help compensate for some of its lower outcome measures too.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Baptist East is a nonparticipating hospital, but it scored highest for its process measures and had a mix of best and worst outcome measures. Baptist has only nominal and low AHA place-holding scores for Computerized Orders and ICU Staffing. Leapfrog weights these items fairly heavily so these low scores hurt Baptist more than if it had no ratings for these items at all! Is it possible that Baptist might have received an A if its Leapfrog sustitutes had been better? A similar phenomena may have occurred at Hopkins County which lost its earlier Safety Score of A . Hopkins County is not Leapfrog-participating and had no value for Computerized Order Entry last November. This May, for reasons not known to me, it was given 20 points out of 100 for this item. Hopkins also had a small increase in central-line infection rate but was still the best of our group. I have to wonder if the relative ding against Computer Ordering did not hurt the hospital. In other words, it may be better not to have a score at all than to have a low one!<\/span><\/p>\n<p>I must confess that as I focus on individual hospitals over time, I believe the argument that participation with Leapfrog may give an advantage to many hospitals is a rational one that may hold water. \u00a0It certainly\u00a0deserves to be addressed definitively. I believe Leapfrog should release its entire database to the general public for free, just as Medicare does, so that other health policy experts can analyze it. Their safety and quality ratings affect the reputations of hospitals that are run by public agencies or at least supported by public money and are vital to us all. \u00a0To much is riding on the scores for any of the process to be less than fully open.<\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Hospitals that lost ground.<\/span><\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> University of Louisville Hospital, which does participate with Leapfrog, dropped from a B to C. Jewish &amp; St. Mary&#8217;s which chooses not to participate dropped from a C to a D. Both hospitals actually lost ground in some of the individual process measurements and neither was starting from a position of particular strength. In my opinion, participating or not, a decline in individual quality and safety parameters probably best explains the drop in overall letter grade.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #000000;\">What might we conclude?<\/span><\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> \u2022 No hospitals in Louisville stand out in Leapfrog&#8217;s Safety Score evaluation. Louisville hospitals have a way to go to demonstrate that they provide safe medical care of high quality, at least using the current standards.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">\u2022 One of our hospitals looks pretty bad to Leapfrog in this respect and is second lowest in the state.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">\u2022 Hospitals are being evaluated using different sets of data points from different time periods. If this was clinical research (isn&#8217;t it?), we would be talking about missing data and non-comparability. Conclusions drawn from the research would be suspect. Statistics can only patch over so much.<\/span><\/p>\n<p>\u2022<span style=\"color: #000000;\">The burden is on Leapfrog to demonstrate the extent to which participation in their private hospital survey does or not influence overall score one way or the other. From the experiments of nature before us, it seems to me that participation can have a dramatic effect. Is this fair to hospitals?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">\u2022 Too many hospitals are excluded from evaluation because they are too small or for unstated reasons. What are we to assume when a hospital that previously received a grade drops off the radar screen?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">\u2022 Some hospitals have &#8220;perfect&#8221; scores. Such a hospital would have much to teach its peers. Are they doing so?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong><span style=\"color: #000000;\">What do I conclude?<\/span><\/strong><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> The short answer is that my confidence in the reliability, reproducibility, and utility of Leapfrog&#8217;s Hospital Safety Scoring system in particular, and in other safety and quality assessment programs in general, continues to erode. Not-ready-for-prime-time is the phrase that pops into my head. And yet even as I write, hospitals are receiving financial bonuses and penalties based on the underlying Medicare Compare data. I am willing, perhaps even eager to be shot down by someone with understandable evidence that all of this expensive data-churning is doing some good for clinical care. Is there a better way to use our treasures of money and time?<\/span><\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">I have been flogging the ether about this for well over a year. I take some professional gratification that I am not the only one asking these questions. Another Kentucky physician recently made similar points. [I cannot find the recent link again. Help anyone?] \u00a0A new <a title=\"White Paper on Quality assessment\" href=\"http:\/\/www.rwjf.org\/en\/research-publications\/find-rwjf-research\/2013\/05\/achieving-the-potential-of-health-care-performance-measures.html?cid=xem_hcpm5-21-13B&amp;cid=\" target=\"_blank\">white paper<\/a> from the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the Urban Institute covers the same ground and more, but better still, makes recommendations for a different way forward that makes much sense to me. We want to be in a healthcare-place that has as its foundation good science, honesty, transparency, and accountability to the public. There are certainly several paths to get there.<\/span><\/p>\n<p><strong>A call for more openness.<\/strong><br \/>\nFor reasons discussed above, I believe Leapfrog should make its safety and quality databases available to the public for free, including prior years so that hospitals can get credit for improvement or to put the public on notice should scores worsen. For example, I would like to examine in more detail what happened to cause the scores at St. Elizabeth Edgewood to go from a B to a C and now to an A. \u00a0 Leapfrog did allow me earlier this year to study the database underlying its November Safety Score.\u00a0 I was able to connect it to federal Medicare and Medicaid databases allowing me to see how different categories of hospitals were doing.\u00a0 The results were interesting and even refuted some of the criticisms made by hospital organizations.\u00a0 However I had to promise not to publish anything without permission. That is not the way scholarship or public policy should work.<\/p>\n<p>I call also on Kentucky Governor Steve Beshear and Secretary Audrey Tayse Haynes of the Cabinet for Health and Family Services to release the Kentucky Health Services Database to the public as was the intention of the legislature.\u00a0 It is a gold mine of information about the quality and financing of healthcare in Kentucky.\u00a0 No other well of information is as deep or complete\u2013 not even the Medicare databases.\u00a0 It can be purchased now, but the price is in many thousands of dollars if you want to compare even two years. Hospitals like to buy it to scope out the competition and for marketing purposes. They pay for it with patient revenues but it is unaffordable to organizations like mine. State law and regulation are clear that one copy is to be provided for free to anyone who asks for it, but my initial request was rejected.\u00a0 Imagine what I could be writing about if I had access to the payer mix of every Kentucky hospital.\u00a0 Imagine how useful such information would have been when we were immersed in last year&#8217;s merger controversy, the scandal over misuse of Passport Medicaid funds, or the discussion over how to fund indigent care!\u00a0 I will try again and may ask for your moral support!\u00a0 Contact me to talk about this.<\/p>\n<p><span style=\"color: #000000;\">Peter Hasselbacher, MD<\/span><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> President,KHPI<\/span><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> Emeritus Professor of Medicine, UofL<\/span><br \/>\n<span style=\"color: #000000;\"> May 24, 2013<\/span><\/p>\n<div class=\"sharedaddy sd-sharing-enabled\"><div class=\"robots-nocontent sd-block sd-social sd-social-icon-text sd-sharing\"><h3 class=\"sd-title\">Share this:<\/h3><div class=\"sd-content\"><ul><li><a href=\"#\" class=\"sharing-anchor sd-button share-more\"><span>Share<\/span><\/a><\/li><li class=\"share-end\"><\/li><\/ul><div class=\"sharing-hidden\"><div class=\"inner\" style=\"display: none;\"><ul><li class=\"share-facebook\"><a rel=\"nofollow noopener noreferrer\" data-shared=\"sharing-facebook-2165\" class=\"share-facebook sd-button share-icon\" href=\"http:\/\/www.khpi.org\/blog\/safety-of-louisville-hospitals-are-we-there-yet\/?share=facebook\" target=\"_blank\" title=\"Click to share on Facebook\" ><span>Facebook<\/span><\/a><\/li><li class=\"share-linkedin\"><a rel=\"nofollow noopener noreferrer\" data-shared=\"sharing-linkedin-2165\" class=\"share-linkedin sd-button share-icon\" href=\"http:\/\/www.khpi.org\/blog\/safety-of-louisville-hospitals-are-we-there-yet\/?share=linkedin\" target=\"_blank\" title=\"Click to share on LinkedIn\" ><span>LinkedIn<\/span><\/a><\/li><li class=\"share-end\"><\/li><li class=\"share-twitter\"><a rel=\"nofollow noopener noreferrer\" data-shared=\"sharing-twitter-2165\" class=\"share-twitter sd-button share-icon\" href=\"http:\/\/www.khpi.org\/blog\/safety-of-louisville-hospitals-are-we-there-yet\/?share=twitter\" target=\"_blank\" title=\"Click to share on Twitter\" ><span>Twitter<\/span><\/a><\/li><li class=\"share-email\"><a rel=\"nofollow noopener noreferrer\" data-shared=\"\" class=\"share-email sd-button share-icon\" href=\"mailto:?subject=%5BShared%20Post%5D%20Safety%20of%20Louisville%20Hospitals%3A%20%20Are%20we%20there%20yet%3F&body=http%3A%2F%2Fwww.khpi.org%2Fblog%2Fsafety-of-louisville-hospitals-are-we-there-yet%2F&share=email\" target=\"_blank\" title=\"Click to email a link to a friend\" data-email-share-error-title=\"Do you have email set up?\" data-email-share-error-text=\"If you&#039;re having problems sharing via email, you might not have email set up for your browser. 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