• Annals of surgery · Apr 2016

    Impact of Hospital Characteristics on Failure to Rescue Following Major Surgery.

    • Kyle H Sheetz, Justin B Dimick, and Amir A Ghaferi.
    • Department of Surgery, Center for Healthcare Outcomes and Policy, University of Michigan, Ann Arbor, MI.
    • Ann. Surg. 2016 Apr 1; 263 (4): 692-7.

    ObjectiveTo determine the effect of hospital characteristics on failure to rescue after high-risk surgery in Medicare beneficiaries.Summary Background DataReducing failure to rescue events is a common quality target for US hospitals. Little is known about which hospital characteristics influence this phenomenon and more importantly by how much.MethodsWe identified 1,945,802 Medicare beneficiaries undergoing 1 of six high-risk general or vascular operations between 2007 and 2010. Using multilevel mixed-effects logistic regression modeling, we evaluated how failure to rescue rates were influenced by specific hospital characteristics previously associated with postsurgical outcomes. We used variance partitioning to determine the relative influence of patient and hospital characteristics on the between-hospital variability in failure to rescue rates.ResultsFailure to rescue rates varied up to 11-fold between very high and very low mortality hospitals. Comparing the highest and lowest mortality hospitals, we observed that teaching status (range: odds ratio [OR] 1.08-1.54), high hospital technology (range: OR 1.08-1.58), increasing nurse-to-patient ratio (range: OR 1.02-1.14), and presence of >20 intensive care unit (ICU) beds (range: OR 1.09-1.62) significantly influenced failure to rescue rates for all procedures. When taken together, hospital and patient characteristics accounted for 12% (lower extremity revascularization) to 57% (esophagectomy) of the observed variation in failure to rescue rates across hospitals.ConclusionsAlthough several hospital characteristics are associated with lower failure to rescue rates, these macrosystem factors explain a small proportion of the variability between hospitals. This suggests that microsystem characteristics, such as hospital culture and safety climate, may play a larger role in improving a hospital's ability to manage postoperative complications.

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