Patient safety at the nation's hospitals took a hit again
as three more studies connected poor practices at hospitals
with costly and often lethal infections in hospitalized
patients.
Three groups of researchers studied hospital-acquired
infections in reports released together last week that
reaffirmed not only the deadly, costly and wasteful nature
of these medical errors, but also the validity of a
2-year-old Pennsylvania public reporting program on
hospital-acquired infections.
"It's 1992 New York all over again," said David Nash,
editor in chief of the
American Journal of Medical Quality,
where the studies appeared in a 40-page special section.
Nash was referring to the New York launch of the
first-in-the-nation, statewide open-heart-surgery
report-card program. "Look how far we've come," he said.
"That was front-page news for a week, and Pennsylvania was
right behind New York." Pennsylvania started its heart
surgery reporting program in 1994.
The patient-safety "trifecta," as Nash called the three
studies, were presented as "Hospital-Acquired Infections:
Meeting the Challenge," a supplement to the
November-December 2006 issue of the
AJMQ, published by the
American College of Medical Quality.
The studies showed:
• On average, central line-associated bloodstream
infections at one Pittsburgh hospital cost more to treat
than what was covered by hospital-acquired-infection-related
payments, regardless of payer.
• The likelihood of surgical wound infections, as
reported in the statewide Pennsylvania
hospital-acquired-infections initiative, can be predicted
to a statistically significant degree by patient acuity,
but to an even greater degree by variance between
hospitals.
• Across multiple diagnoses at admission, variance in
mortality, length of stay and charges between
hospital-acquired-infection cases and
nonhospital-acquired-infection cases statewide in
Pennsylvania cannot be explained by the commonly heard
defense that "my patients are sicker."
Nash, the physician chairman of the Department of Health
Policy at Jefferson Medical College of Thomas Jefferson
University in Philadelphia, wrote in an introductory
commentary that the
AJMQ special section "provides some
intriguing, albeit unsettling, information regarding the
link between (hospital-acquired infections) and increased
hospital costs, and makes it clear that it is the process
of care, not the underlying clinical condition of the
patient, that drives the current epidemic of"
hospital-acquired infections. The reports, Nash wrote,
"will stir emotion" and likely "will be met with skepticism
by some, shock by others and incredulity by the remainder."
But only by bucking the conventional wisdom "that infection
in the hospital is a byproduct of our day-to-day business,
we will go a long way toward restoring the faith of the
public in what we do, reducing the cost of our actions, and
improving the overall quality of medical care in the United
States."
The supplement is one of many recent efforts to tackle the
problem. The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
released guidelines in October designed to help hospital
staff better manage methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus
aureus -- considered to be a "superbug."
The National Quality Forum, the standard-bearer for
hospital and physician quality measures, said it is
studying whether to add hospital-acquired infections to its
list of "never" events. A report on the topic is expected
sometime next year.
And the CMS proposed to eliminate reimbursement payments
for infections that it deems preventable beginning in
October 2008.
Key to the three studies was data from Pennsylvania.
Beginning in January 2004, acute-care hospitals in
Pennsylvania were required to report cases of
hospital-acquired infections from orthopedic, neurosurgery
and circulatory-system surgeries; central line-associated
infections of the bloodstream; and urinary-tract infections
from Foley catheters. The reports were gathered in a
database maintained by the Pennsylvania Health Care Cost
Containment Council. Reporting on 2004
hospital-acquired-infection data began last year.
Two weeks ago, 2005 data from 168 hospitals went online
showing that 19,154 patients had acquired an infection that
year while hospitalized in Pennsylvania. Of them, 2,478
died in the hospital, a mortality rate of 12.9% compared
with a rate of 2.3% for all patients.
Hospital-acquired-infection patients' average
length of stay was 20.6 days compared with 4.5 days for all
patients, and their average charge was $185,260 compared
with $31,389.
Marc Volavka, executive director of the council, said at a
news conference last week in Washington that many
physicians and hospital administrators who fought the
Pennsylvania council's hospital-acquired-infection
public-reporting program did so because they thought it
would have little impact on the infection rate and would be
too complicated for the public to understand.
But with the release, "no hospital went out of business,"
Volavka said. "No doctor went out of business."
Of the three
AJMQ studies, the most dramatic and poignant
was produced by researchers looking into the cost of 54
central line-associated bloodstream infections in the
28-bed medical intensive-care and coronary-care units at
Allegheny General Hospital in Pittsburgh between July 2002
and June 2005.
Of the 54 central-line cases studied, only four of the
least-complicated produced a positive gross operating
margin for the hospital. Those results were more than
offset by the often soaring costs of the remaining 50
cases. Payments for all 54 cases ranged wildly, from $4,546
to $299,318—costs even more so, from $15,565 to $353,205.
Bottom line, a central-line case yielded an operating loss
for the hospital of $26,839 on average and $1,449,306 in
total.
The toll on patients was even more grim. Twenty-two of the
54 central-line-infection patients died. Only nine went
home, with the bulk of the survivors being discharged to
long-term-care or other facilities.
To humanize the numbers, the report included five
vignettes, including a case study of a 37-year-old video
programmer who was admitted with acute pancreatitis and
hypertriglyceridemia. He had a femoral venous catheter
placed for treatment, the tip of which later was found to
be colonized with a drug-resistant strain of staph
bacteria. On his fifth day in the hospital, he started
running a fever, his blood pressure dropped and his
breathing began to labor and fail, landing him in the ICU
on a ventilator. Then his kidneys faltered, requiring
dialysis; he developed abdominal abscesses, and after 19
days on the ventilator, underwent a tracheostomy.
Eighty-six days after admission, he was
discharged to a nursing home. Even though he was insured by
"a large commercial payer," the hospital received $200,031
for his care against $241,844 in costs, an operating loss
of $41,813.
Data from the Allegheny Hospital study were "in keeping"
with those gathered by the Pennsylvania council statewide,
showing that hospital-acquired infections were more costly
"by a factor of six," the report said. In addition, "we did
not find any significant relationship between different
payers and the magnitude of operational losses." Physician
researcher Richard Shannon, lead author of the Allegheny
study, said going in, "There was a tacit assumption that
hospitals were making money on these cases because of
outlier payments."
"I think no one realized … that a large amount of money
gets consumed in these infections, and that money gets tied
up that we could use to do other things that we cannot now
do," said Shannon, who is now senior vice chairman of the
Department of Medicine at the University of Pennsylvania
Health System, and was previously chairman of the department
of medicine at Allegheny General Hospital.
Another of the studies, "Factors Associated with Risk of
Surgical Wound Infections," attempted to determine to what
degree patient acuity played in the matter. Looking at
risk-adjusted surgery data for selected procedures from the
Pennsylvania council, the study found that generally there
was a statistically significant but relatively "poor"
association between the condition of the patient at
admission and the incidence of hospital-acquired
infections. But when specific hospitals were added as a
variable, "the prediction of infection was improved by 23%
to 33%" depending on type of surgery, the study found.
"The patient factors are statistically significant, and
there is no way to get around that," said Christopher
Hollenbeak, lead author of the report. "Our data show those
factors that are attributable to hospitals are much more
significant," said Hollenbeak, a health economist and
associate professor of surgery and health evaluation
sciences at Penn State College of Medicine, Hershey, Pa.
The last of the three studies similarly looked at
patient-level data from the Pennsylvania council and from
data-mining firm MediQual, Marlborough, Mass., to try and
determine if sicker patients were skewing the data.
"The question that was first raised with Pennsylvania's
report was the people (with hospital-acquired infections)
are very ill, so of course they had higher mortality. It
comes free with the territory," said lead author Richard
Johannes, vice president of clinical affairs at MediQual, a
division of pharmaceutical wholesaler Cardinal Health.
What the MediQual study tried to answer was whether this
was so, he said. The study's thoroughly descriptive title,
"Adverse Outcomes From Hospital-Acquired Infection in
Pennsylvania Cannot Be Attributed to Increased Risk," gives
the answer.
"It tells you that even after you select the sickest of the
sick, you still have this increase in the hospital-acquired
infections," Johannes said. The report concluded that
"Reducing factors that contribute to the development of
(hospital-acquired infections) can save lives, decrease
costs and save valuable healthcare resources."
The Association for Professionals in Infection Control and
Epidemiology said it was pleased that the studies looked at
the economics of hospital-acquired infections -- especially
how much could be reinvested back into a quality infection
-- control program if they were greatly reduced or
eliminated.
Brent James, director of the Institute for Health Care
Delivery Research at Intermountain Healthcare in Salt Lake
City, said he was not surprised Shannon's research showed a
financial benefit would accrue to Allegheny from reducing
central-line infections, but based on more than two decades
of experience in various quality improvement projects at
the institute, unfortunately, that isn't the rule.
At the institute, "What we see consistently is that about
three-quarters of the time that when you save money, your
costs drop, but your revenues drop even more," James
said.
-- with Matthew DoBias
This article initially appeared in
the Nov. 27 edition of Modern Healthcare
magazine.
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