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- Jacqueline M Saito, Li Ern Chen, Bruce L Hall, Kari Kraemer, Douglas C Barnhart, Claudia Byrd, Mark E Cohen, Chunyuan Fei, Kurt F Heiss, Kristopher Huffman, Clifford Y Ko, Melissa Latus, John G Meara, Keith T Oldham, Mehul V Raval, Karen E Richards, Rahul K Shah, Laura C Sutton, Charles D Vinocur, and R Lawrence Moss.
- Division of Pediatric Surgery, Washington University, St. Louis, MO, USA.
- Pediatrics. 2013 Sep 1;132(3):e677-88.
UnlabelledBACKGROUND The American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program-Pediatric was initiated in 2008 to drive quality improvement in children's surgery. Low mortality and morbidity in previous analyses limited differentiation of hospital performance.MethodsParticipating institutions included children's units within general hospitals and free-standing children's hospitals. Cases selected by Current Procedural Terminology codes encompassed procedures within pediatric general, otolaryngologic, orthopedic, urologic, plastic, neurologic, thoracic, and gynecologic surgery. Trained personnel abstracted demographic, surgical profile, preoperative, intraoperative, and postoperative variables. Incorporating procedure-specific risk, hierarchical models for 30-day mortality and morbidities were developed with significant predictors identified by stepwise logistic regression. Reliability was estimated to assess the balance of information versus error within models.ResultsIn 2011, 46 281 patients from 43 hospitals were accrued; 1467 codes were aggregated into 226 groupings. Overall mortality was 0.3%, composite morbidity 5.8%, and surgical site infection (SSI) 1.8%. Hierarchical models revealed outlier hospitals with above or below expected performance for composite morbidity in the entire cohort, pediatric abdominal subgroup, and spine subgroup; SSI in the entire cohort and pediatric abdominal subgroup; and urinary tract infection in the entire cohort. Based on reliability estimates, mortality discriminates performance poorly due to very low event rate; however, reliable model construction for composite morbidity and SSI that differentiate institutions is feasible.ConclusionsThe National Surgical Quality Improvement Program-Pediatric expansion has yielded risk-adjusted models to differentiate hospital performance in composite and specific morbidities. However, mortality has low utility as a children's surgery performance indicator. Programmatic improvements have resulted in actionable data.
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