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Development of Emergency Department Quality Indicators QI

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Title: Development of Emergency Department Quality Indicators QI


1
Development of Emergency Department Quality
Indicators (QI)
  • Kathryn M. McDonald
  • Center for Health Policy / Center for Primary
    Care and Outcomes Research, Stanford University
  • September 14, 2009

2
Overview
  • Development of AHRQ QI Using ED Data
  • Patient Safety Indicators (PSI)
  • Prevention Quality Indicators (PQI)
  • AHRQ QI Development Methodology
  • Adapting the AHRQ QI to the ED
  • Potential QI ED Indicators
  • Patient Safety Events
  • Avoidable ED visits
  • Data Issues
  • Summary

2
3
Development of AHRQ ED QI
  • Purpose of this New Task
  • Develop a set of quality indicators that is
    applicable to the emergency department setting
  • Incorporate set into the publicly available AHRQ
    QI software
  • Implement the established AHRQ QI measurement
    development process
  • Adapt existing AHRQ QI to ED setting
  • Conduct a review of new candidate indicators

3
4
Existing AHRQ QIsPatient Safety Indicators (PSI)
  • Death in low mortality DRGs
  • Decubitus ulcer
  • Failure to rescue
  • Foreign body left during procedure
  • Iatrogenic pneumothorax
  • Selected infections due to medical care
  • Postoperative hemorrhage or hematoma
  • Postoperative hip fracture
  • Postoperative physiological and metabolic
    derangement
  • Postoperative PE or DVT

The indicators marked with are also provided as
area level indicators.
5
Patient Safety Indicators (cont.)
  • Postoperative respiratory failure
  • Postoperative sepsis
  • Postoperative wound dehiscence
  • Technical difficulty with procedure
  • Transfusion reaction
  • Birth trauma injury to neonate
  • OB trauma vaginal delivery with instrument (w/
    and w/o 3rd degree lacerations)
  • OB trauma vaginal delivery without instrument
    (w/ and w/o 3rd degree lacerations)

The indicators marked with are also provided as
area level indicators.
6
Existing AHRQ QIsPrevention Quality Indicators
  • Bacterial pneumonia
  • Dehydration
  • Urinary tract infection
  • Perforated appendix
  • Low birth weight
  • Angina without procedure
  • Congestive heart failure
  • Hypertension
  • Adult asthma
  • COPD
  • Diabetes cx - short term
  • Diabetes cx - long term
  • Uncontrolled diabetes
  • Lower extremity amputation

7
Measure Development and Validation Process
SOURCES
8
Starting Point 1 Adapting the AHRQ QI
  • Developing emergency department PSI shall involve
    several challenges. Conceptually patient safety
    issues may manifest themselves at different
    points in time and in different settings
  • Within the ER visit, or
  • In an admission to the same hospital (promising
    area of focus) or
  • Outside of the ER of interest or the same
    hospital (e.g, home, another ER, another
    hospital)
  • Development effort might consider the
    relationship between the PQIs and potential PSIs
    in the ED context
  • For example, a patient that presents at the
    emergency department with a Urinary Tract
    Infection (UTI) and then gets admitted as an
    inpatient. This patient will flag as a PQI at the
    ED level and at the inpatient admission level.
  • However, another patient that presents with a UTI
    and then is sent home, but returns the following
    day and needs to be admitted might be considered
    a patient safety problem.
  • Our development effort will consider these issues
    and relationships to develop indicators of two
    types potentially preventable ED visits, and
    potentially preventable patient safety events.

8
9
Starting Point 2 Conceptualizing Quality Issues
  • What types of adverse events might occur during
    an ED admission/encounter?
  • Conditions worsens while waiting (related to ED
    crowding)
  • Occult GI bleeds, sepsis, hypoglycemia, atypical
    heart attacks
  • Cardiac arrest in waiting room, death of asthma
    patient
  • Air embolism from IV lines
  • Medication error
  • Wrong medication to wrong patient (e.g., with too
    many patients in one treatment room)
  • Incorrect dose (e.g. patient not weighed,
    transcription errors)
  • Medication give when patient has known allergy
  • Drug interaction reaction (e.g., coumadin with
    certain common antibiotics)
  • Inadequate monitoring (e.g., hypogylcemia after
    insulin, resp distress with narcotics)
  • Hemolytic reaction due to administration of
    incompatible blood or blood products
  • Falls
  • From Stretcher, Bed, Bathroom, Wet floor

9
10
Patient Safety Events
  • What types of adverse events might occur during
    an ED admission/encounter or soon after?
  • Alarm malfunctions
  • Not audible to or not seen by nurses
  • IV Pump issues
  • Back up battery failures stops meds,
    unintentional change of settings, inadequate
    monitoring
  • Patient specimen errors
  • Patients not fully registered or identified when
    specimen leaves ED, leading to lags in results
    communications, or assigning results to wrong
    patient
  • Infection control failures
  • Incorrect diagnosis bounce back
  • Patient returns to ED for abdominal pain (missed
    AAA)
  • X rays interpreted as negative, fracture dx on
    later read or when patient returns
  • Death in a psychiatric patient admitted to psych
    ward within 72 hours of ED visit (missed organic
    causes)
  • Missed injuries (Traumatic brain injury)

10
11
Potentially Avoidable Visits
  • What ED encounters are potentially preventable by
    high quality outpatient care?
  • Diabetic Complications
  • Hyperglycemia
  • Infections
  • Asthma
  • Acute respiratory event
  • Bronchitis
  • Hypertension
  • Hypertensive urgency
  • Hemorrhagic stroke
  • Colds, Flu Invasive Pneumococcal Disease
  • Poor hand hygiene
  • Lack of primary care
  • Missed Flu shot
  • Missed Pneumococcal Vaccine

11
12
Potentially Avoidable Visits
  • What ED encounters are potentially preventable by
    public health interventions?
  • Falls
  • Hip Fractures, Long bone fractures, Pediatric
    (e.g., due to poor window guards)
  • Brain injury secondary (not wearing helmets)
  • Fireworks injuries
  • Dehydration
  • ETOH intoxication
  • Overdose/substance abuse
  • Sexually transmitted diseases
  • Obstetric complications
  • Motor vehicle collision
  • Drowning
  • Carbon monoxide poisoning (poorer quality
    furnaces)
  • Accidental hypothermia (homeless sleeping in
    cold)
  • Food poisoning (poor restaurant sanitation)

12
13
Potentially Avoidable Visits
  • What ED encounters are potentially preventable
    with health care system changes?
  • Primary care provider told patient to go to ED
    over the phone when office practice is closed
  • Weekend
  • Night Time
  • Inadequate care outside ED for Aging population
  • Unable to provide self care, and inadequate
    support available
  • Incontinence issues
  • Care given due to lack of adequate insurance for
    non-ED care
  • Ingrown toe nails with infection
  • Vaginitis
  • Urethritis
  • Otitis Media
  • Running out of home oxygen
  • Possibly due to lack of primary care doctor
  • Sore throat
  • Urinary tract infection

13
14
Potentially Avoidable Visits
  • What ED encounters are potentially preventable
    with improvements to post-surgical care
    processes?
  • Unable to care for self post-operatively (return
    visit)
  • Outpatient Surgery Complications
  • Wound dehiscence from outpatient surgery
  • Post op Infections
  • Hemorrhaging
  • Other post op complications

14
15
Data Source Issues
  • State Emergency Department Datasets (SEDD)
  • Treat and release encounters from 27 states
  • Encounters resulting in subsequent admission to
    the same hospital from 41 states
  • How do records for the subsequent admissions
    relate to corresponding hospitalization records
    in the SID datasets?
  • Diagnosis and Procedure Codes
  • May be that ED diagnosis codes are dropped or
    incorporated into a longer list when the patient
    is admitted
  • May be no effective method to evaluate the
    quality of ED care for patients who were
    hospitalized from the ED
  • These issues will be evaluated in detail

15
16
Summary Project Philosophy
  • Emergency medicine is particularly sensitive to
    guidelines and quality measures from other
    specialties (e.g., cardiology, infectious
    disease, pediatrics).
  • The EM community is not always included in
    guideline and quality measure development at the
    initial stages, even though they are affected
    most.
  • Therefore, a focus on ED quality needs to starts
    with the EM community (doctors, nurses,
    department managers).
  • Use existing data sources available from AHRQ
  • Therefore, this projects indicators will not
    cover all important ED quality concern (e.g.,
    ambulance diversions from overcrowding)
  • Start with existing AHRQ measures and development
    approaches

17
Acknowledgments
  • Funded by AHRQ
  • Support for Quality Indicators II (Contract No.
    290-04-0020)
  • Mamatha Pancholi, AHRQ Project Officer
  • Jeffrey Geppert, Project Director, Battelle
    Memorial Institute Sciences
  • Data used for analyses
  • State Emergency Department Databases (SEDD),
    2002-2006. Healthcare Cost and Utilization
    Project (HCUP), Agency for Healthcare Research
    and Quality
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