Up close and personal: A statewide collaborative's effort to get individual surgeon quality improvement data to the practitioner

3Citations
Citations of this article
16Readers
Mendeley users who have this article in their library.
Get full text

Abstract

Ranking of surgeons and hospitals focuses on procedure volume and hospitality. The National Surgical Quality Improvement Program provides vetted outcomes of surgical quality and therefore can direct improvement. Our statewide collaborative's analysis creates personalized surgeon data to drive quality improvement. Statewide National Surgical Quality Improvement Program data generated specific measures from 103,656 general/vascular cases and identified individual surgeon's outcome of occurrences and length of procedure.We assumed a normal distribution and called the top 2.5 per cent as exemplars and the bottom 2.5 per cent as outliers. For length of operation, a standard duration was calculated, and identified outliers as longer than the 95th percentile of the upper confidence interval/procedure. Since 2009, sharing best practice reduced statewide mortality rate by 31.5 per cent and postoperative morbidity by 33.3 per cent. For length of surgery, long outliers have more complications (urinary tract infection, organ space/surgical site infection, sepsis, septic shock, prolonged intubation, pneumonia, deep venous thrombosis, deep incisional infection, and wound disruption). No significant trends in surgeon performance were seen over 24 months. A statewide collaborative has resulted in substantial risk-Adjusted reductions in surgical morbidity and mortality. These results of the individual surgeon demonstrate best practices are shared, a proven tool for improvement in our collaborative.

Cite

CITATION STYLE

APA

Daley, B. J., Cecil, W., Cofer, J. B., Clarke, P. C., & Guillamondegui, O. (2016). Up close and personal: A statewide collaborative’s effort to get individual surgeon quality improvement data to the practitioner. In American Surgeon (Vol. 82, pp. 192–198). Southeastern Surgical Congress. https://doi.org/10.1177/000313481608200310

Register to see more suggestions

Mendeley helps you to discover research relevant for your work.

Already have an account?

Save time finding and organizing research with Mendeley

Sign up for free