Tuesday, December 11, 2012

25 Hospitals Get Failing Grade on Safety by Quality Group

(One of them is in Rexburg)
Robert Lowes Nov 29, 2012
Twenty-five hospitals across the country — 4 of them in Chicago, Illinois — have received a failing grade on patient safety from a quality-improvement organization called The Leapfrog Group.
The organization bases its grades on publicly available hospital safety data that measure how well a hospital averts preventable infections, injuries, and medical and medication errors.
Leapfrog, a coalition of public and private purchasers of health insurance benefits that includes behemoths such as General Motors and FedEx, issued its first safety grades in June 2012 to 2652 hospitals. At that time, Leapfrog did not publicly report Fs and Ds for the hospitals that earned them. Instead, the group put them in a "grade pending" category. Yesterday, Leapfrog published an update to the June 2012 grades identifying the D and F hospitals, which in its words represent "the most hazardous environments for patients in need of care."
Perhaps the biggest name among the 25 hospitals flunked by Leapfrog is the University of California Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical Center in Los Angeles. In response to the Leapfrog grade, the academic medical center issued a statement saying that UCLA's mission of delivering "the safest, highest quality, cutting-edge care" is reflected in numerous rankings and reports. It faulted hospital report-card methodologies used by various quality-improvement groups as being inconsistent.
"The same hospital can rank high on one report card and low on another report card," the hospital stated.
Only one city, Chicago, was home to multiple hospitals with an F grade for safety. Those in the Windy City were Jackson Park Hospital and Medical Center, Loretto Hospital, Norwegian American Hospital, and Roseland Community Hospital.
Table. Hospitals Receiving an F for Safety in Fall 2012 Scores of Leapfrog Group (Alphabetically by State)
Wiregrass Medical CenterGeneva, Alabama
Hazel Hawkins Memorial HospitalHollister, California
Palo Verde HospitalBlythe, California
University of California Ronald Reagan UCLA Medical CenterLos Angeles, California
Western Medical Center AnaheimAnaheim, California
Phoebe Putney Memorial HospitalAlbany, Georgia
Madison Memorial HospitalRexburg, Idaho
Jackson Park Hospital and Medical CenterChicago, Illinois
Jersey Community HospitalJerseyville, Illinois
Loretto HospitalChicago, Illinois
Norwegian American HospitalChicago, Illinois
Roseland Community HospitalChicago, Illinois
Daviess Community HospitalWashington, Indiana
Richardson Medical CenterRayville, Louisiana
Texas County Memorial HospitalHouston, Missouri
Holy Rosary Medical CenterOntario, Oregon
Clarendon Memorial HospitalManning, South Carolina
Wallace Thomson HospitalUnion, South Carolina
Christus Spohn Hospital BeevilleBeeville, Texas
Gulf Coast Medical CenterWharton, Texas
Renaissance HospitalHouston, Texas
Renaissance Hospital DallasDallas, Texas
Renaissance Hospital TerrellTerrell, Texas
Buchanan General HospitalGrundy, Virginia
Valley General HospitalMonroe, Washington


Massachusetts Has Highest Percentage of Grade-A Hospitals
On a positive note, the percentage of hospitals receiving an A for patient safety increased from 27% to 30% since June. In a coup for New England, Massachusetts led the nation with the highest percentage (83%) of hospitals earning As, with Maine (80%) close behind in second place, and Vermont tied with North Dakota and Delaware (50%) in third place.
New Mexico brought up the rear, with only 7% of its hospitals — one, to be exact — awarded an A.
No single class of hospital dominated the A list, Leapfrog noted. Top honors went to those in rural areas such as Blessing Hospital in Quincy, Illinois; hospitals serving impoverished, highly vulnerable populations such as Detroit (Michigan) Receiving Hospital; and prestigious academic medical centers such as the Mayo Clinic in Rochester, Minnesota, and Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston, Massachusetts.
Leapfrog said that hospital safety grades are calculated under the guidance of a 9-member panel of patient safety experts. They include Lucian Leape, MD, an adjunct professor at the Harvard School of Public Health, and Peter Pronovost, MD, PhD, director of the Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality at Johns Hopkins Medicine in Baltimore, Maryland.
To come up with a grade, the panel analyzed 26 measures of publicly available hospital safety data, some from the federal government, some collected by Leapfrog itself, and weighted each measure on the basis of evidence, opportunity for improvement, and impact. Half of the final grade reflected measures that involve the process and structure of care. An example of a process measure is how often a hospital gives an antibiotic to a surgery patient within an hour before the first incision. A structural-measure example is whether a hospital uses a computerized physician order entry (CPOE) system to reduce prescribing errors.
The other half of the safety grade was based on outcome measures, such as the frequency of retractors and other foreign objects left in surgery patients and the rate of central-line associated bloodstream infections.
More information on The Leapfrog Group's safety scores is available on the group's Web site.


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