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The New England Journal of Medicine;
July 21, 2005
Quality of Care in U.S. Hospitals as Reflected by
Standardized Measures, 2002 –2004
Scott C. Williams, Psy.D., Stephen P. Schmaltz, Ph.D., David J.
Morton, M.S., Richard G. Koss, M.A., and Jerod M.Loeb, Ph.D.
In July 2002,the
Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations
implemented standardized performance measures that were designed
to track the performance of accredited hospitals and encourage
improvement in the quality of health care.
We examined
hospitals ’ performance on 18 standardized indicators of the
quality of care for acute myocardial infarction, heart failure,
and pneumonia. One measure assessed a clinical outcome (death in
the hospital after acute myocardial infarction), and the other 17
measures assessed processes of care. Data were collected over a
two-year period in more than 3000 accredited hospitals. All
participating hospitals received quarterly feedback in the form of
comparative reports throughout the study.
Descriptive
analysis revealed a significant improvement (P<0.01) in the
performance of U.S. hospitals on 15 of 18 measures, and no measure
showed a significant deterioration. The magnitude of improvement
ranged from 3 percent to 33 percent during the eight quarters
studied. For 16 of the 17 process-of-care measures, hospitals with
a low level of performance at baseline had greater improvements
over the subsequent two years than hospitals with a high level of
performance at baseline. Over a two-year
period, we observed consistent improvement in measures reflecting
the process of care for acute myocardial infarction, heart
failure, and pneumonia. Both quantitative and qualitative research
are needed to explore the reasons for these improvements.
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