Diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission indicator in different diagnosis groups: pilot study at a Swiss tertiary care center

Abstract Background With few exceptions the International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes for diagnoses and official coding guidelines do not distinguish pre-existing conditions from complications or comorbidities which occur during hospitalization. However, information on diagnos...

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Main Authors: Karen Triep, Thomas Beck, Jacques Donzé, Olga Endrich
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: BMC 2019-01-01
Series:BMC Health Services Research
Subjects:
Online Access:http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3858-3
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spelling doaj-0febfc12d90c4a9f899a4cd8e8fe71e32020-11-25T02:13:31ZengBMCBMC Health Services Research1472-69632019-01-0119111010.1186/s12913-018-3858-3Diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission indicator in different diagnosis groups: pilot study at a Swiss tertiary care centerKaren Triep0Thomas Beck1Jacques Donzé2Olga Endrich3Medical Directorate, Inselspital, University Hospital of BernDepartment of General Internal Medicine, University Hospital of BernDepartment of General Internal Medicine, University Hospital of BernMedical Directorate, Inselspital, University Hospital of BernAbstract Background With few exceptions the International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes for diagnoses and official coding guidelines do not distinguish pre-existing conditions from complications or comorbidities which occur during hospitalization. However, information on diagnosis timing is relevant with regard to the case’s severity, resource consumption and quality of care. In this study we analyzed the diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission (POA) indicator using routinely collected health data. Methods We included all inpatient cases of the department of medicine during 2016 with a diagnosis of deep vein thrombosis, decubitus ulcer or delirium. Swiss coding guidelines of 2016 and the definitions of the Swiss medical statistics of hospitals were analyzed to evaluate the potential to encode information on diagnosis timing. The diagnoses were revised by applying the information present-on-admission by a coding specialist and by a medical expert, serving as Gold Standard. The diagnostic value and reliability were evaluated. Results The inter-rater reliability for POA of all diagnoses was 0.7133 (Cohen’s kappa), but differed between diagnosis groups (0.558–0.7164). The rate of POA positive of the total applied by the coding specialist versus the expert was similar, but differed between diagnoses. In group “thrombosis” SEN was 0.95, SPE 0.75, PPV 0.97 and NPV 0.60, in group “decubitus ulcer” SEN 0.89, SPE 0.82, PPV 0.89 and NPV 0.82, in group “delirium” SEN 0.91, SPE 0.65, PPV 0.71 and NPV 0.88 For all diagnoses SEN 0.92, SPE 0.73, PPV 0.87, NPV 0.82, summing up the cases of all diagnosis groups. Conclusions Coding the POA indicator identified diagnoses which were pre-existent with insufficient reliability on individual patient’s level. The overall fair to sufficient diagnostic quality is appropriate for screening and benchmarking performance on population level. As the medical statistics of hospitals carries no variable on pre-existing conditions, the novel approach to apply the POA indicator to diagnoses gives more information on quality of hospital care and complexity of cases. By preparing documentation for POA reporting diagnostic quality must be increased before implementation for risk-assessment or reimbursement on the individual patient’s level.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3858-3Present on admissionRoutinely collected health dataDiagnostic valueQuality indicatorComplications and comorbiditiesQuality of inpatient care
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Karen Triep
Thomas Beck
Jacques Donzé
Olga Endrich
spellingShingle Karen Triep
Thomas Beck
Jacques Donzé
Olga Endrich
Diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission indicator in different diagnosis groups: pilot study at a Swiss tertiary care center
BMC Health Services Research
Present on admission
Routinely collected health data
Diagnostic value
Quality indicator
Complications and comorbidities
Quality of inpatient care
author_facet Karen Triep
Thomas Beck
Jacques Donzé
Olga Endrich
author_sort Karen Triep
title Diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission indicator in different diagnosis groups: pilot study at a Swiss tertiary care center
title_short Diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission indicator in different diagnosis groups: pilot study at a Swiss tertiary care center
title_full Diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission indicator in different diagnosis groups: pilot study at a Swiss tertiary care center
title_fullStr Diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission indicator in different diagnosis groups: pilot study at a Swiss tertiary care center
title_full_unstemmed Diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission indicator in different diagnosis groups: pilot study at a Swiss tertiary care center
title_sort diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission indicator in different diagnosis groups: pilot study at a swiss tertiary care center
publisher BMC
series BMC Health Services Research
issn 1472-6963
publishDate 2019-01-01
description Abstract Background With few exceptions the International Statistical Classification of Diseases (ICD) codes for diagnoses and official coding guidelines do not distinguish pre-existing conditions from complications or comorbidities which occur during hospitalization. However, information on diagnosis timing is relevant with regard to the case’s severity, resource consumption and quality of care. In this study we analyzed the diagnostic value and reliability of the present-on-admission (POA) indicator using routinely collected health data. Methods We included all inpatient cases of the department of medicine during 2016 with a diagnosis of deep vein thrombosis, decubitus ulcer or delirium. Swiss coding guidelines of 2016 and the definitions of the Swiss medical statistics of hospitals were analyzed to evaluate the potential to encode information on diagnosis timing. The diagnoses were revised by applying the information present-on-admission by a coding specialist and by a medical expert, serving as Gold Standard. The diagnostic value and reliability were evaluated. Results The inter-rater reliability for POA of all diagnoses was 0.7133 (Cohen’s kappa), but differed between diagnosis groups (0.558–0.7164). The rate of POA positive of the total applied by the coding specialist versus the expert was similar, but differed between diagnoses. In group “thrombosis” SEN was 0.95, SPE 0.75, PPV 0.97 and NPV 0.60, in group “decubitus ulcer” SEN 0.89, SPE 0.82, PPV 0.89 and NPV 0.82, in group “delirium” SEN 0.91, SPE 0.65, PPV 0.71 and NPV 0.88 For all diagnoses SEN 0.92, SPE 0.73, PPV 0.87, NPV 0.82, summing up the cases of all diagnosis groups. Conclusions Coding the POA indicator identified diagnoses which were pre-existent with insufficient reliability on individual patient’s level. The overall fair to sufficient diagnostic quality is appropriate for screening and benchmarking performance on population level. As the medical statistics of hospitals carries no variable on pre-existing conditions, the novel approach to apply the POA indicator to diagnoses gives more information on quality of hospital care and complexity of cases. By preparing documentation for POA reporting diagnostic quality must be increased before implementation for risk-assessment or reimbursement on the individual patient’s level.
topic Present on admission
Routinely collected health data
Diagnostic value
Quality indicator
Complications and comorbidities
Quality of inpatient care
url http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12913-018-3858-3
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