mortality indicators Flashcards

1
Q

what are the three commonly used measures of mortality in NHS?

A

crude mortality rate, hospital standardised mortality ratio, summary hospital mortality indicator

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2
Q

what is the purpose of a mortality indicator?

A

to see if the mortality level is expected, compare to other providers of care and see the changes over time

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3
Q

what is crude mortality rate?

A

it is the number of deaths per number of hospital admissions over a set period of time

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4
Q

why is there variation between organisations?

A

may be due to quality of care or could be due to case mix - differing levels of comorbidity or deprivation

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5
Q

what is case mix useful for?

A

tracking changes over time as long as the case mix is not believed to have changed

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6
Q

what is HSMR?

A

it is the number of deaths in a trust using diagnoses that make up 80% of hospital deaths - that is taken from routinely collected data

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7
Q

what does HSMR look at?

A

the predicted number of deaths compared to actual using standardised mortality ratio

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8
Q

what is included in the standardised mortality ratio?>

A

age, sex, gender, ethnicity, deprivation, method of admission, previous admissions, comorbidites, month of admission and provision of palliative care and diagnosis

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9
Q

what can HSMR predict?

A

the number of deaths per case mix per year

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10
Q

how do you calculate the ratio?

A

expected number of deaths / actual x100 - national average is 100

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11
Q

why is there variation in HSMR between trusts?

A

variation in care, variation in coding and variation in community provision

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12
Q

why might HSMR be lower than expected?

A

poor care, poor coding, different patient pathways - lower opportunity to die outside of hospital - fewer hospices etc

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13
Q

what are the categories of HSMR results?

A

significantly better than national average, significantly worse or not significantly different to NA

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14
Q

what do you need to check for HSMR?

A

check coding, case mix, structure, process and individuals or teams (least likely)

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15
Q

how is SHMI different to HSMR?

A

it is derived from all admissions to secondary care and not just a subset

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16
Q

what five factors are used to standardise SHMI?

A

age, sec, comorbidities, primary diagnosis and admission type

17
Q

how do you define comorbidities?

A

Charlson index

18
Q

what is SHMI?

A

the ratio of expected to actual deaths

19
Q

when are out of hospital deaths recorded in SHMI?

A

provided the patient dies at an address in England

20
Q

what is a raised HSMR and and SHMI not?

A

indication with problem with care - it is a flag to investigate further