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Quality variations exist, even among leading health systems.

Quality variations exist, even among leading health systems

May 10, 2012 in Health

Five leading health systems are changing aspects of how they perform total knee replacements, as a result of data they collected that showed variations in length of stay, length of operating room time, and in-hospital complications. The voluntary testing of clinical measures and processes they identified as potential “best practices” is a step toward their goal of higher quality care, at lower cost.

Founding members of the High Value Healthcare Collaborative (HVHC) are Cleveland Clinic, Dartmouth-Hitchcock, Denver Health, Intermountain Healthcare, Mayo Clinic, and The Dartmouth Institute for Health Policy and Clinical Practice (TDI). In a paper released by Health Affairs as a Web First on Wednesday, May 9 at 4PM ET, the HVHC outlined the first results from their study of nearly 11,000 total knee replacements performed across the five health systems. Comparison data showed “considerable” differences among the institutions in procedures and outcomes, the authors report. These included:

  • A difference of more than one full day in length of stay between the system with the shortest average length of stay (3 days) and that with the longest (4.2 days);
  • A difference of 25 minutes in the time spent in surgery, ranging between 80 and 105 minutes;
  • A rate of readmissions ranging from 2.2 percent to 4.6 percent

Data gathered by the HVHC teams examined factors including demographics and previous health conditions of the subject patient populations, the experience and caseload of physicians performing the surgery, make-up of the care teams, and patient care information from pre-admission through one-year post-discharge.

In addition to the variations above, findings revealed that surgeons who perform higher numbers of total knee replacements (TKR) tend to have shorter operating times, shorter lengths of stay, and fewer in-hospital complications. Patients who were older and sicker generally had longer lengths of stay and more in-hospital complications. Almost 90 percent of the patients – aged 18-89 – were overweight, obese, or morbidly obese.

The TKR data collection and analysis will be extending throughout 11 additional health systems that have joined the Collaborative. The five founding members, however, are already testing some changes based on the findings to date. These improvements are intended to achieve more coordinated management of complex patients, more consistent operative teams for surgeons, and a process to improve the management of patient expectations.

As an example of one of the clinical process changes being made, several HVHC members are considering dedicated operating room teams that specialize in total knee replacement. The data showed that the one institution to consistently match surgeons with the same specialized team of technicians and nurses consistently had the shortest operative times. This is significant because longer time in surgery is associated with higher inpatient complication rates.

The intention of the HVHC is to identify best practices and subsequently move them out to other health care institutions so that all providers and patients can benefit from this work. According to the authors: “The initial findings…provide benchmark data against which other health systems might measure themselves, demonstrate opportunities for learning and improvement within and across the health care delivery organizations, and identify further opportunities to improve delivery of total knee arthroplasty.”

The Collaborative was founded in 2010 and identified nine high volume, high cost, high variation conditions to focus on, with the goal of improving care and outcomes, reducing variation, and lowering costs. In addition to TKR, the conditions are: diabetes, congestive heart failure, depression, spine surgery, labor and delivery, asthma, hip surgery, and bariatric surgery. A further description of the Collaborative work can be found here.

Primary total knee arthroplasty (single knee replacement) was chosen as the first condition to study, based on its increasing prevalence and cost. In 2008, TKR inpatient costs exceeded $9 billion. Between 2005 and 2030, the demand for the procedure is projected to grow by 673 percent or 3.48 million procedures annually.

  • Knee Replacements On Shaky Scientific Ground (blogs.scientificamerican.com)
  • Are All Knee Replacements Really Safe And Effective? Study Says Maybe Not (huffingtonpost.com)
  • Knee Replacements Double in 10 Years, Study Says – ABC News (blog) (abcnews.go.com)
  • Prolific surgeon leads way as Fremont hospital rides wave in joint replacements (mercurynews.com)
  • NorthShore University HealthSystem First in Illinois to Perform Remarkable Robotic Arm Guided Partial Knee Replacement Surgery (prweb.com)
  • More Than 4 Million Americans Have New Knee (news.health.com)
  • Scripps Researchers Receive NIH Grant to Study Smart Knee (prweb.com)
  • Is it Possible to use Disruptive Innovations to Integrate Health Systems? (recruitingforhealthcarejobs.wordpress.com)
  • More Than 4 Million Americans Have New Knee (nlm.nih.gov)
  • Knee Osteoarthritis to Increase in Younger Age Groups in Next Ten Years (prweb.com)
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