Hospital‐level compliance with the commission on cancer’s quality of care measures and the association with patient survival
Abstract Background Quality measurement has become a priority for national healthcare reform, and valid measures are necessary to discriminate hospital performance and support value‐based healthcare delivery. The Commission on Cancer (CoC) is the largest cancer‐specific accreditor of hospital qualit...
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doaj-2201ac136bd247ecb1f3a6546ced23892021-06-05T04:48:49ZengWileyCancer Medicine2045-76342021-06-0110113533354410.1002/cam4.3875Hospital‐level compliance with the commission on cancer’s quality of care measures and the association with patient survivalDaniel P. Nussbaum0Christel N. Rushing1Zhifei Sun2Babatunde A. Yerokun3Mathias Worni4Robert S. Saunders5Mark B. McClellan6Donna Niedzwiecki7Rachel A. Greenup8Dan G. Blazer III9Department of Surgery Duke University Durham NC USADepartment of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics Duke University Durham NC USADepartment of Surgery Duke University Durham NC USADepartment of Surgery Duke University Durham NC USADepartment of Visceral Surgery, Clarunis University Centre for Gastrointestinal and Liver DiseasesSt. Clara Hospital and University Hospital Basel SwitzerlandDuke UniversityRobert J. Margolis Center for Health Policy Durham NC USADuke UniversityRobert J. Margolis Center for Health Policy Durham NC USADepartment of Biostatistics and Bioinformatics Duke University Durham NC USADepartment of Surgery and Population Health Sciences Duke UniversityDuke Cancer Institute Durham NC USADepartment of Surgery Duke UniversityDuke Cancer Institute Durham NC USAAbstract Background Quality measurement has become a priority for national healthcare reform, and valid measures are necessary to discriminate hospital performance and support value‐based healthcare delivery. The Commission on Cancer (CoC) is the largest cancer‐specific accreditor of hospital quality in the United States and has implemented Quality of Care Measures to evaluate cancer care delivery. However, none has been formally tested as a valid metric for assessing hospital performance based on actual patient outcomes. Methods Eligibility and compliance with the Quality of Care Measures are reported within the National Cancer Database, which also captures data for robust patient‐level risk adjustment. Hospital‐level compliance was calculated for the core measures, and the association with patient survival was tested using Cox regression. Results Seven hundred sixty‐eight thousand nine hundred sixty‐nine unique cancer cases were included from 1323 facilities. Increasing hospital‐level compliance was associated with improved survival for only two measures, including a 35% reduced risk of mortality for the gastric cancer measure G15RLN (HR 0.65, 95% CI 0.58–0.72) and a 19% reduced risk of mortality for the colon cancer measure 12RLN (HR 0.81, 95% CI 0.77–0.85). For the lung cancer measure LNoSurg, increasing compliance was paradoxically associated with an increased risk of mortality (HR 1.14, 95% CI 1.08–1.20). For the remaining measures, hospital‐level compliance demonstrated no consistent association with patient survival. Conclusion Hospital‐level compliance with the CoC’s Quality of Care Measures is not uniformly aligned with patient survival. In their current form, these measures do not reliably discriminate hospital performance and are limited as a tool for value‐based healthcare delivery.https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.3875cancerhospitalsprocess measuresquality of care |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Daniel P. Nussbaum Christel N. Rushing Zhifei Sun Babatunde A. Yerokun Mathias Worni Robert S. Saunders Mark B. McClellan Donna Niedzwiecki Rachel A. Greenup Dan G. Blazer III |
spellingShingle |
Daniel P. Nussbaum Christel N. Rushing Zhifei Sun Babatunde A. Yerokun Mathias Worni Robert S. Saunders Mark B. McClellan Donna Niedzwiecki Rachel A. Greenup Dan G. Blazer III Hospital‐level compliance with the commission on cancer’s quality of care measures and the association with patient survival Cancer Medicine cancer hospitals process measures quality of care |
author_facet |
Daniel P. Nussbaum Christel N. Rushing Zhifei Sun Babatunde A. Yerokun Mathias Worni Robert S. Saunders Mark B. McClellan Donna Niedzwiecki Rachel A. Greenup Dan G. Blazer III |
author_sort |
Daniel P. Nussbaum |
title |
Hospital‐level compliance with the commission on cancer’s quality of care measures and the association with patient survival |
title_short |
Hospital‐level compliance with the commission on cancer’s quality of care measures and the association with patient survival |
title_full |
Hospital‐level compliance with the commission on cancer’s quality of care measures and the association with patient survival |
title_fullStr |
Hospital‐level compliance with the commission on cancer’s quality of care measures and the association with patient survival |
title_full_unstemmed |
Hospital‐level compliance with the commission on cancer’s quality of care measures and the association with patient survival |
title_sort |
hospital‐level compliance with the commission on cancer’s quality of care measures and the association with patient survival |
publisher |
Wiley |
series |
Cancer Medicine |
issn |
2045-7634 |
publishDate |
2021-06-01 |
description |
Abstract Background Quality measurement has become a priority for national healthcare reform, and valid measures are necessary to discriminate hospital performance and support value‐based healthcare delivery. The Commission on Cancer (CoC) is the largest cancer‐specific accreditor of hospital quality in the United States and has implemented Quality of Care Measures to evaluate cancer care delivery. However, none has been formally tested as a valid metric for assessing hospital performance based on actual patient outcomes. Methods Eligibility and compliance with the Quality of Care Measures are reported within the National Cancer Database, which also captures data for robust patient‐level risk adjustment. Hospital‐level compliance was calculated for the core measures, and the association with patient survival was tested using Cox regression. Results Seven hundred sixty‐eight thousand nine hundred sixty‐nine unique cancer cases were included from 1323 facilities. Increasing hospital‐level compliance was associated with improved survival for only two measures, including a 35% reduced risk of mortality for the gastric cancer measure G15RLN (HR 0.65, 95% CI 0.58–0.72) and a 19% reduced risk of mortality for the colon cancer measure 12RLN (HR 0.81, 95% CI 0.77–0.85). For the lung cancer measure LNoSurg, increasing compliance was paradoxically associated with an increased risk of mortality (HR 1.14, 95% CI 1.08–1.20). For the remaining measures, hospital‐level compliance demonstrated no consistent association with patient survival. Conclusion Hospital‐level compliance with the CoC’s Quality of Care Measures is not uniformly aligned with patient survival. In their current form, these measures do not reliably discriminate hospital performance and are limited as a tool for value‐based healthcare delivery. |
topic |
cancer hospitals process measures quality of care |
url |
https://doi.org/10.1002/cam4.3875 |
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