The Mayo Clinic Hospital Mortality Reduction Project: Description and Results.


Journal

Journal of healthcare management / American College of Healthcare Executives
ISSN: 1096-9012
Titre abrégé: J Healthc Manag
Pays: United States
ID NLM: 9803529

Informations de publication

Date de publication:
Historique:
entrez: 14 3 2020
pubmed: 14 3 2020
medline: 17 12 2020
Statut: ppublish

Résumé

Quality improvement, regulatory, and payer organizations use various definitions of hospital mortality as clinical outcome measures. In this prospective study, the authors evaluated a multicomponent intervention aimed at reducing inpatient mortality in a multistate healthcare delivery system. The project was initiated because of a statistically nonsignificant upward trend in mortality suggested by a six-quarter rise in the observed/expected mortality ratio generated by the Vizient Clinical Data Base and Resource Manager. The design of the mortality reduction plan was influenced by the known limitations of using hospital-wide mortality as a quality improvement measure. The primary objective was to reduce mortality through focused care redesign. The project leadership team attempted to implement standardized system-wide improvements while allowing individual hospitals to simultaneously pursue site-specific practice redesign opportunities. Between Q3, 2015, and Q4, 2017, system-wide mortality reduced from 1.78 to 1.53 (per 100 admissions; p = .01). The actual plan implemented in Mayo Clinic's hospitals is included as Appendix A to this article, published online as Supplemental Digital Content. The authors included it to allow comparison with similar efforts at other healthcare systems, as well as to stimulate criticism and discussion by readers.

Identifiants

pubmed: 32168188
doi: 10.1097/JHM-D-19-00002
pii: 00115514-202004000-00009
doi:

Types de publication

Journal Article

Langues

eng

Pagination

122-132

Commentaires et corrections

Type : CommentIn

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Auteurs

Jeff T Mueller (JT)

associate dean for hospital practice, Department of Anesthesiology and Perioperative Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, Arizona assistant professor, healthcare systems engineering, Mayo Clinic College of Medicine, Jacksonville, Florida quality performance analyst, Mayo Clinic, Phoenix, Arizona professor of medicine, Department of Internal Medicine, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota associate professor, Department of Health Sciences Research, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota associate dean for value creation, Department of Laboratory Medicine and Pathology, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota; and chair, Quality and Affordability Administration, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, Minnesota.

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