Topics
More on Quality and Safety

HealthGrades study: 'Unacceptably wide gap' between top peforming hospitals, others

Patients treated at five-star-rated hospitals had a 72 percent lower risk of dying compared to those at one-star-rated hospitals, according to a study by the healthcare ratings organization HealthGrades.

Experts say this gap has held steady over the past years, even as overall mortality rates have improved.

"Thirteenth Annual HealthGrades Hospital Quality in America" analyzed objective mortality and complication rates at the nation's 5,000 non-federal hospitals using 40 million hospitalization records obtained from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

The study, the largest of its kind, identified national and state-level trends in hospital care quality and established quality ratings for each hospital across 26 different procedures and diagnoses. The ratings are online, allowing individuals to compare their local hospitals.

Looking at overall trends, the HealthGrades study found that hospital mortality rates, on average, have declined by 7.98 percent over the three-year period studied, from 2007 to 2009. Of the 17 mortality-based diagnoses and procedures analyzed, only two – gastrointestinal surgeries and coronary intervention procedures – bucked the overall trend with increasing mortality rates.

HealthGrades rated individual hospitals with a one, three or five stars in 26 procedures and diagnoses, from bypass surgery to total knee replacements. A one-star rating means the hospital performed below average to a statistically significant degree when compared with the other 5,000 hospitals. A three-star rating means the hospital's performance was average, and a five-star rating means the hospital outperformed the national average.

Five-star-rated hospitals had significantly lower risk-adjusted mortality across the three years studied. A typical patient would have a 72.47 percent lower risk of dying in a five-star-rated hospital compared to a one-star-rated hospital and a 53.36 percent lower risk of dying by going to five-star-rated hospital compared to the U.S. hospital average.

"We are encouraged by the steady improvement in mortality rates among America's hospitals, but there's an unacceptably wide gap that has persisted between the top-performing hospitals and all others in terms of patient outcomes," said Rick May, MD, an author of the study and a vice president with HealthGrades. "For hospital leaders as well as potential patients, it is essential that they understand – and act upon – these findings."

Key findings from the study include:

  • The nation's hospitals' unadjusted mortality improved, on average, 7.98 percent from 2007 through 2009 across the 17 diagnoses and procedures studied.
  • All but two diagnoses and procedures saw reductions in the unadjusted mortality rates. Gastrointestinal surgeries and procedures and coronary interventional procedures were associated with an increase in unadjusted mortality of 8.76 percent and 9.26 percent, respectively.
  • The highest unadjusted mortality rates are among sepsis, respiratory failure and gastrointestinal surgeries and procedures (20.59 percent, 19.45 percent and 10.29 percent, respectively).
  • The most improvement in unadjusted mortality was seen in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (18.73 percent), bowel obstruction (14.72 percent), heart attack (13.68 percent) and stroke (13.50 percent).
  • If all hospitals performed at the level of a five-star-rated hospital, 232,442 Medicare lives could potentially have been saved from 2007 through 2009.
  • Approximately 55.91 percent (129,949) of the potentially preventable deaths were associated with four diagnoses: sepsis (48,809), pneumonia (29,017), respiratory failure (26,361) and heart failure (25,762).
  • On average, one in nine patients developed a hospital-acquired infection across the nine procedures evaluated for in-hospital complications from 2007 to 2009.
  • On average, a typical patient would have an 80.40 percent lower risk of developing one or more in-hospital complications by going to a five-star-rated hospital compared to a one-star-rated hospital and a 63.64 percent lower risk of developing one or more in-hospital complications by going to a five-star-rated hospital compared to the U.S. hospital average.