• J. Thromb. Thrombolysis · Jul 2010

    Are surgical patients at risk of venous thromboembolism currently meeting the Surgical Care Improvement Project performance measure for appropriate and timely prophylaxis?

    • Steven B Deitelzweig, Jay Lin, Mohamed Hussein, and David Battleman.
    • Ochsner Hospital, Ochsner Clinic Foundation, New Orleans, LA 70121-2429, USA. Sdeitelzweig@ochsner.org
    • J. Thromb. Thrombolysis. 2010 Jul 1; 30 (1): 55-66.

    AbstractThe US Surgical Care Improvement Project (SCIP) has approved two performance measures to improve venous thromboembolism (VTE) prevention. SCIP-VTE-2 measures the proportion of surgery patients who received appropriate VTE prophylaxis within 24 h prior to surgery to 24 h after surgery. This study assesses the current rate of achievement of SCIP-VTE-2 criteria using a retrospective data set of real-world surgical patients. The Premier Perspective database, which contains real-world data from >400 US hospitals, was queried (January 2004-December 2006) for in-patient hospital transactional billing records of surgical patients aged >or=18 years. The primary outcome was the proportion of patients achieving SCIP-VTE-2 requirements for appropriate and timely prophylaxis as per the SCIP-VTE-2 algorithm. Of the 149,785 patients included, 56.2% received appropriate prophylaxis and 52.7% achieved the SCIP-VTE-2 performance measure for both appropriate and timely prophylaxis. To conclude, this study highlights that VTE prophylaxis currently only meets SCIP-VTE-2 requirements in approximately half of real-world surgical patients. The use of retrospective analyses such as this hospital billing data analysis may assist hospitals in measuring their current and future performance in VTE prevention.

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