The Effect of Intensive Care Unit Admission Patterns on Mortality-based Critical Care Performance Measures

Ann Am Thorac Soc. 2016 Jun;13(6):877-86. doi: 10.1513/AnnalsATS.201509-645OC.

Abstract

Rationale: Current mortality-based critical care performance measurement focuses on intensive care unit (ICU) admissions as a single group, conflating low-severity and high-severity ICU patients for whom performance may differ and neglecting severely ill patients treated solely on hospital wards.

Objectives: To assess the relationship between hospital performance as measured by risk-standardized mortality for severely ill ICU patients, less severely ill ICU patients, and severely ill patients outside the ICU.

Methods: Using a statewide, all-payer dataset from the Pennsylvania Healthcare Cost Containment Council, we analyzed discharge data for patients with nine clinical conditions with frequent ICU use. Using a validated severity-of-illness measure, we categorized hospitalized patients as either high severity (predicted probability of in-hospital death in top quartile) or low severity (all others). We then created three mutually exclusive groups: high-severity ICU admissions, low-severity ICU admissions, and high-severity ward patients. We used hierarchical logistic regression to generate hospital-specific 30-day risk-standardized mortality rates for each group and then compared hospital performance across groups using Spearman's rank correlation.

Measurements and main results: We analyzed 87 hospitals with 22,734 low-severity ICU admissions (mean per hospital, 261 ± 187), 10,991 high-severity ICU admissions (mean per hospital, 126 ± 105), and 6,636 high-severity ward patients (mean per hospital, 76 ± 48). We found little correlation between hospital performance for high-severity ICU patients versus low-severity ICU patients (ρ = 0.15; P = 0.17). There were 29 hospitals (33%) that moved up or down at least two quartiles of performance across the ICU groups. There was weak correlation between hospital performance for high-severity ICU patients versus high-severity ward patients (ρ = 0.25; P = 0.02). There were 24 hospitals (28%) that moved up or down at least two quartiles of performance across the high-severity groups.

Conclusions: Hospitals that perform well in caring for high-severity ICU patients do not necessarily also perform well in caring for low-severity ICU patients or high-severity ward patients, indicating that risk-standardized mortality rates for ICU admissions as a whole offer only a narrow window on a hospital's overall performance for critically ill patients.

Keywords: critical care; health care quality assessment; health services; intensive care; patient outcome assessment.

Publication types

  • Multicenter Study
  • Research Support, N.I.H., Extramural

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Critical Care / standards*
  • Critical Illness / mortality
  • Cross-Sectional Studies
  • Female
  • Hospital Mortality*
  • Humans
  • Intensive Care Units / organization & administration*
  • Logistic Models
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Patient Admission / statistics & numerical data*
  • Patient Outcome Assessment
  • Pennsylvania
  • Probability