Citation

BibTex format

@article{Cecil:2020,
author = {Cecil, E and Bottle, R and Vincent, C and Esmail, A and Aylin, P},
journal = {Journal of Health Services Research and Policy},
pages = {13--21},
title = {What is the relationship between mortality alerts and other indicators of quality of care? A national cross-sectional study},
url = {http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/67631},
volume = {25},
year = {2020}
}

RIS format (EndNote, RefMan)

TY  - JOUR
AB - Objective: To assess whether mortality alerts, triggered by sustained higher than expected hospital mortality, are associated with other potential indicators of hospital quality relating to factors of hospital structure, clinical process and patient outcomes.Study Design: Cross sectional study of National Health Service hospital trusts in England (2011-2013).Data collection/extraction methods: Publicly available hospital measures chosen a-prior to reflect 1) Organisational structure (mean acute bed occupancy, nurse/bed ratios, training satisfaction and proportion of trusts with low NHS Litigation Authority risk assessment or in financial deficit), 2) Process (mean % of eligible patients who receive percutaneous coronary intervention within 90 minutes) and 3) Outcome (mean patient satisfaction scores, summary measures of hospital mortality (SHMI and HSMR) and % of patient harmed). Mortality alerts were based on hospital administrative data.Principal Findings: Mortality alerts were associated with structural indicators and outcome indicators of quality. There was insufficient data to detect an association between mortality alerts and our process indicator.Conclusion:Mortality alerts appear to reflect aspects of quality within an English hospital setting, suggesting that there may be value in a mortality alerting system in highlighting poor hospital quality.
AU - Cecil,E
AU - Bottle,R
AU - Vincent,C
AU - Esmail,A
AU - Aylin,P
EP - 21
PY - 2020///
SN - 1355-8196
SP - 13
TI - What is the relationship between mortality alerts and other indicators of quality of care? A national cross-sectional study
T2 - Journal of Health Services Research and Policy
UR - http://hdl.handle.net/10044/1/67631
VL - 25
ER -
Department of Primary Care and Public Health

Privacy notice

The Dr Foster Unit at Imperial College London uses your health information for a number of purposes. The Dr Foster Unit GDPR Privacy Notice (PDF) provides a summary of how we use your information.