- Browse by Subject
Browsing by Subject "quality of healthcare"
Now showing 1 - 3 of 3
Results Per Page
Sort Options
Item Correlation of inpatient and outpatient measures of stroke care quality within veterans health administration hospitals(2011-08) Ross, Joseph S.; Arling, Greg; Ofner, Susan; Roumie, Christianne L; Keyhani, Salomeh; Williams, Linda S.; Ordin, Diana L.; Bravata, Dawn M.Background and Purpose—Quality of care delivered in the inpatient and ambulatory settings may be correlated within an integrated health system such as the Veterans Health Administration. We examined the correlation between stroke care quality at hospital discharge and within 6 months postdischarge. Methods—We conducted a cross-sectional hospital-level correlation analyses of chart-abstracted data for 3467 veterans discharged alive after an acute ischemic stroke from 108 Veterans Health Administration medical centers and 2380 veterans with postdischarge follow-up within 6 months in fiscal year 2007. Four risk-standardized processes of care represented discharge care quality: prescription of antithrombotic and antilipidmic therapy, anticoagulation for atrial fibrillation, and tobacco cessation counseling along with a composite measure of defect-free care. Five risk-standardized intermediate outcomes represented postdischarge care quality: achievement of blood pressure, low-density lipoprotein, international normalized ratio, and glycosylated hemoglobin target levels, and delivery of appropriate treatment for poststroke depression along with a composite measure of achieved outcomes. Results—Median risk-standardized composite rate of defect-free care at discharge was 79%. Median risk-standardized postdischarge rates of achieving goal were 56% for blood pressure, 36% for low-density lipoprotein, 41% for international normalized ratio, 40% for glycosylated hemoglobin, and 39% for depression management and the median risk-standardized composite 6-month outcome rate was 44%. The hospital composite rate of defect-free care at discharge was correlated with meeting the low-density lipoprotein goal (r=0.31; P=0.007) and depression management (r=0.27; P=0.03) goal but was not correlated with blood pressure, international normalized ratio, glycosylated hemoglobin goals, nor with the composite measure of achieved postdischarge outcomes (probability values >0.13). Conclusions—Hospital discharge care quality was not consistently correlated with ambulatory care quality.Item Lower use of carotid artery imaging at minority-serving hospitals(2012-07) Cheng, Eric M.; Keyhani, Salomeh; Ofner, Susan; Williams, Linda S.; Hebert, Paul L; Ordin, Diana L.; Bravata, Dawn M.Objective: We determined whether site of care explains a previously identified racial disparity in carotid artery imaging. Methods: In this retrospective cohort study, data were obtained from a chart review of veterans hospitalized with ischemic stroke at 127 Veterans Administration hospitals in 2007. Extensive exclusion criteria were applied to obtain a sample who should have received carotid artery imaging. Minority-serving hospitals were defined as the top 10% of hospitals ranked by the proportion of stroke patients who were black. Population level multivariate logistic regression models with adjustment for correlation of patients in hospitals were used to calculate predictive probabilities of carotid artery imaging by race and minority-service hospital status. Bootstrapping was used to obtain 95% confidence intervals (CIs). Results: The sample consisted of 1,534 white patients and 628 black patients. Nearly 40% of all black patients were admitted to 1 of 13 minority-serving hospitals. No racial disparity in receipt of carotid artery imaging was detected within nonminority serving hospitals. However, the predicted probability of receiving carotid artery imaging for white patients at nonminority-serving hospitals (89.7%, 95% CI [87.3%, 92.1%]) was significantly higher than both white patients (78.0% [68.3%, 87.8%] and black patients (70.5% [59.3%, 81.6%]) at minority-serving hospitals. Conclusions: Underuse of carotid artery imaging occurred most often among patients hospitalized at minority-serving hospitals. Further work is required to explore why site of care is a mechanism for racial disparities in this clinically important diagnostic test.Item Postdischarge quality of care: Do age disparities exist among Department of Veterans Affairs ischemic stroke patients?(2013) Chumbler, Neale R.; Jia, Huanguang; Phipps, Michael S.; Li, Xinli; Ordin, Diana L.; Williams, Linda S.; Myers, Laura J.This study examined whether age disparities existed across postdischarge quality indicators (QIs) for veterans with ischemic stroke who received care at Department of Veterans Affairs medical centers (VAMCs). This retrospective cohort included a national sample of 3,196 veterans who were diagnosed with ischemic stroke and received acute and postdischarge stroke care at 127 VAMCs in fiscal year 2007 (10/1/06 through 9/30/07). Data included an assessment of postdischarge stroke QIs in the outpatient setting during the 6 mo postdischarge. The QIs included measurement of and goal achievement for (1) blood pressure, (2) serum international normalized ratio (INR) for all patients discharged on warfarin, (3) cholesterol (low-density lipoprotein [LDL]) levels, (4) serum glycosylated hemoglobin, and (5) depression treatment. The mean age for the 3,196 veterans included in this study was 67.2 +/– 11.3 yr. Before risk adjustment, there were age differences in (1) depression screening/treatment, (2) blood pressure goals, and (3) LDL levels. After we adjusted for patient sociodemographic, clinical, and facility-level characteristics by using hierarchical linear mixed modeling, none of these differences remained significant but INR goals for patients discharged on warfarin differed significantly by age. After we adjusted for patient and facility characteristics, fewer age differences were found in the postdischarge stroke QIs. Clinical trial registration was not required.