A simple insightful approach to investigating a hospital standardised mortality ratio: an illustrative case-study.

Despite methodological concerns Hospital Standardised Mortality Ratios (HSMRs) are promoted as measures of performance. Hospitals that experience an increase in their HSMR are presented with a serious challenge but with little guidance on how to investigate this complex phenomenon. We illustrate a s...

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Main Authors: Mohammed A Mohammed, Andrew J Stevens
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2013-01-01
Series:PLoS ONE
Online Access:http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3589454?pdf=render
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spelling doaj-d687a0520afd491aa16010a95c9a76902020-11-25T02:29:57ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLoS ONE1932-62032013-01-0183e5784510.1371/journal.pone.0057845A simple insightful approach to investigating a hospital standardised mortality ratio: an illustrative case-study.Mohammed A MohammedAndrew J StevensDespite methodological concerns Hospital Standardised Mortality Ratios (HSMRs) are promoted as measures of performance. Hospitals that experience an increase in their HSMR are presented with a serious challenge but with little guidance on how to investigate this complex phenomenon. We illustrate a simple penetrating approach.Retrospective analysis of routinely collected hospital admissions data comparing observed and expected deaths predicted by the Dr Foster Unit case mix adjustment method over three years (n = 74,860 admissions) in Shropshire and Telford NHS Trust Hospital (SaTH) constituting PRH (Princess Royal Hospital) and RSH (Royal Shrewsbury Hospital); whose HSMR increased from 99 in the year 2008/09 to 118 in the year 2009/10.The step up in HSMR was primarily located in PRH (109 to 130 vs. 105 to 118 RSH). Disentangling the HSMR by plotting run charts of observed and expected deaths showed that observed deaths were stable in RSH and PRH but expected deaths, especially at PRH, had fallen. The fall in expected deaths has two possible explanations-genuinely lower risk admissions or that the case-mix adjustment model is underestimating the risk of admissions perhaps because of inadequate clinical coding. There was no evidence that the case-mix profile of admissions had changed but there was considerable evidence that clinical coding process at PRH was producing a lower depth of coding resulting in lower expected mortality.Knowing whether the change (increase/decrease) in HSMR is driven by the numerator or the denominator is a crucial pivotal first step in understanding a given HSMR and so such information should be an integral part of the HSMR reporting methodology.http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3589454?pdf=render
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Mohammed A Mohammed
Andrew J Stevens
spellingShingle Mohammed A Mohammed
Andrew J Stevens
A simple insightful approach to investigating a hospital standardised mortality ratio: an illustrative case-study.
PLoS ONE
author_facet Mohammed A Mohammed
Andrew J Stevens
author_sort Mohammed A Mohammed
title A simple insightful approach to investigating a hospital standardised mortality ratio: an illustrative case-study.
title_short A simple insightful approach to investigating a hospital standardised mortality ratio: an illustrative case-study.
title_full A simple insightful approach to investigating a hospital standardised mortality ratio: an illustrative case-study.
title_fullStr A simple insightful approach to investigating a hospital standardised mortality ratio: an illustrative case-study.
title_full_unstemmed A simple insightful approach to investigating a hospital standardised mortality ratio: an illustrative case-study.
title_sort simple insightful approach to investigating a hospital standardised mortality ratio: an illustrative case-study.
publisher Public Library of Science (PLoS)
series PLoS ONE
issn 1932-6203
publishDate 2013-01-01
description Despite methodological concerns Hospital Standardised Mortality Ratios (HSMRs) are promoted as measures of performance. Hospitals that experience an increase in their HSMR are presented with a serious challenge but with little guidance on how to investigate this complex phenomenon. We illustrate a simple penetrating approach.Retrospective analysis of routinely collected hospital admissions data comparing observed and expected deaths predicted by the Dr Foster Unit case mix adjustment method over three years (n = 74,860 admissions) in Shropshire and Telford NHS Trust Hospital (SaTH) constituting PRH (Princess Royal Hospital) and RSH (Royal Shrewsbury Hospital); whose HSMR increased from 99 in the year 2008/09 to 118 in the year 2009/10.The step up in HSMR was primarily located in PRH (109 to 130 vs. 105 to 118 RSH). Disentangling the HSMR by plotting run charts of observed and expected deaths showed that observed deaths were stable in RSH and PRH but expected deaths, especially at PRH, had fallen. The fall in expected deaths has two possible explanations-genuinely lower risk admissions or that the case-mix adjustment model is underestimating the risk of admissions perhaps because of inadequate clinical coding. There was no evidence that the case-mix profile of admissions had changed but there was considerable evidence that clinical coding process at PRH was producing a lower depth of coding resulting in lower expected mortality.Knowing whether the change (increase/decrease) in HSMR is driven by the numerator or the denominator is a crucial pivotal first step in understanding a given HSMR and so such information should be an integral part of the HSMR reporting methodology.
url http://europepmc.org/articles/PMC3589454?pdf=render
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