PRESS-NEWS.org - Press Release Distribution
PRESS RELEASES DISTRIBUTION

Hospital rankings dramatically affected by calculation methods for readmissions and early deaths

2012-10-09
(Press-News.org) Hospital readmission rates and early death rates are used to rank hospital performance but there can be significant variation in their values, depending on how they are calculated, according to a new study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal).

"Hospital-specific readmission rates have been reported as a quality of care indicator but no consensus exists on how these should be calculated. Our results highlight that caution is required when comparing hospital performance based on 30-day or urgent readmissions given their notable variation when methods used in their calculation change," says Dr. Carl van Walraven, lead author of the study, scientist at ICES@uOttawa, senior scientist at Ottawa Hospital Research Institute (OHRI) and associate professor at the University of Ottawa (uOttawa).

Hospital readmission rates are often used as an indicator of quality of care. However the use of different methods and variables can result in different outcomes, as this study indicates.

The study calculated hospital-specific 30-day death or readmission rates for adults at all 162 Ontario hospitals between 2005 and 2010 using different methods for confounder adjustment (age-sex v. complete) and different units of analysis (all hospitalizations v. 1 per patient).

Hospital-specific rankings varied extensively — ranking changed based on which methodology was used. Readmission rates adjusted for age-sex alone had the greatest variation. Notable variation in 30-day death or urgent readmission rates based on how they were calculated. Slight changes in the methods used to calculate hospital-specific readmission rates have a large influence on their values and the consequent hospital rankings. "Our results highlight the caution required when comparing hospital performance using rates of death or readmission within 30 days," writes van Walraven with coauthors. "To measure quality of care, one would ideally measure the number of avoidable readmissions."

The authors recommend caution in using this measure to compare hospital performance.

"We found that slight changes in the methods used to calculate hospital-specific readmission rates had large influences on their values and the consequent hospital rankings. This should be kept in mind when comparing hospital performance using readmission rates," says van Walraven.

### END


ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:

Canadian C-spine rule more accurate in diagnosing important cervical spine injuries than other rules

2012-10-09
To screen for cervical spine injuries such as fractures in the emergency department, the Canadian C-spine rule appears to be more accurate compared with NEXUS, another commonly used rule, according to a study in CMAJ (Canadian Medical Association Journal). NEXUS stands for the National Emergency X-Radiography Utilization Study. "In the only direct comparison, the Canadian C-spine rule appeared to have better diagnostic accuracy, and it should be used over NEXUS to assess the need for cervical spine imaging," writes Dr. Chris Maher, Director, Musculoskeletal Division, ...

Study maps greenhouse gas emissions to building, street level for US cities

Study maps greenhouse gas emissions to building, street level for US cities
2012-10-09
VIDEO: Arizona State University researchers have developed a new software system capable of estimating greenhouse gas emissions across entire urban landscapes, all the way down to roads and individual buildings. Until... Click here for more information. TEMPE, Ariz. - Arizona State University researchers have developed a new software system capable of estimating greenhouse gas emissions across entire urban landscapes, all the way down to roads and individual buildings. Until ...

Moffitt researchers study effect of chemotherapy combined with immunotherapy for advanced cancers

2012-10-09
Researchers at Moffitt Cancer Center and colleagues at the University of South Florida and Tianjin Medical University Cancer Institute and Hospital in China have discovered that combining chemotherapy drugs and immunotherapy cancer vaccines results in an enhanced anti-tumor effect. The results, achieved by testing cancer cells in a laboratory, are surprising because chemotherapy generally reduces immunity and could cancel out the benefits of immunotherapy when given together. Their study appears in the Aug. 31 online issue of Cancer Research, a publication of the American ...

Recovering 'bodyguard' cells in pancreas may restore insulin production in diabetics

2012-10-09
PHILADELPHIA—The key to restoring production of insulin in type I diabetic patients, previously known as juvenile diabetes, may be in recovering the population of protective cells known T regulatory cells in the lymph nodes at the "gates" of the pancreas, a new preclinical study published online October 8 in Cellular & Molecular Immunology by researchers in the Department of Bioscience Technologies at Thomas Jefferson University suggests. Tatiana D. Zorina, M.D., Ph.D., an Assistant Professor in the Department of Bioscience Technologies, Jefferson School of Health Professions, ...

EARTH: Arctic humidity on the rise

2012-10-09
Alexandria, VA – The Arctic is getting warmer and wetter. As temperatures rise and sea ice melts, scientists suspect that system feedback cycles may further speed up the warming process. Now, a new study out of the University of Colorado at Boulder is showing how shifting patterns of humidity may bring about changes in the Arctic atmosphere. The new study compiled data from the 1950s through the present to examine the subtle changes in the Arctic atmosphere over time. The team then incorporated the data into six new weather models. How will these models affect our perceptions ...

New psychology study reveals unexamined costs of rape

2012-10-09
AUSTIN, Texas — Depression and post-traumatic stress disorder are commonly associated with sexual assault, but a new study from The University of Texas at Austin shows that female victims suffer from a wide spectrum of debilitating effects that may often go unnoticed or undiagnosed. Researchers Carin Perilloux, now a visiting assistant professor at Union College in New York, and David Buss, a professor of psychology at The University of Texas at Austin, found significant negative consequences of rape and attempted sexual assault in 13 domains of psychological and social ...

Aspirin may decrease risk of aggressive form of ovarian cancer

2012-10-09
New research shows that women who regularly use pain relief medications, particularly aspirin, have a decreased risk of serous ovarian cancer—an aggressive carcinoma affecting the surface of the ovary. The study published in Acta Obstetricia et Gynecologica Scandinavica, a journal of the Nordic Federation of Societies of Obstetrics and Gynecology, reports that non-aspirin non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), paracetamol (acetaminophen), or other analgesics did not decrease ovarian cancer risk. Ovarian cancer is the deadliest gynecological malignancy and the ...

7-a-day for happiness and mental health

2012-10-09
Happiness and mental health are highest among people who eat seven portions of fruit and vegetables a day, according to a new report. Economists and public health researchers from the University of Warwick studied the eating habits of 80,000 people in Britain. They found mental wellbeing appeared to rise with the number of daily portions of fruit and vegetables people consumed. Wellbeing peaked at seven portions a day. The research was carried out in conjunction with Dartmouth College in the USA and is due to be published in the journal Social Indicators Research. Most ...

The beauty of the accused unfairly affects perceptions of their culpability

2012-10-09
A study from the University of Granada based on police surveys indicates that in domestic violence crimes in which the woman kills her abuser, if she is more attractive she is perceived as guiltier. From a social psychology point of view, it has been noticed that physical attractiveness has an influence on how people are perceived by others in labour, academic and even legal fields. On the one hand, this creates the mental association of "what is beautiful is good". On the other hand though, when it comes to domestic violence the results are different. "One of the ...

Intrauterine surgery can improve the prognosis for the fetus

2012-10-09
Fetuses with congenital malformations can be helped by surgical intervention while still in the womb. The potential of intrauterine surgery to improve their chances of survival is described by Anke Diemert and her co-authors in the latest issue of Deutsches Ärzteblatt International (Dtsch Arztebl Int 2012; 109(38): 603𔃆). This kind of intervention is indicated only in fetuses with diseases that would lead to intrauterine death or to damage not amenable to postnatal repair. Studies have shown a particularly high benefit of fetoscopic laser coagulation in twin-to-twin ...

LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:

Devastation of island land snails, especially in the Pacific

Microwaves help turn sugar industry waste into high-performance biochar

From craft dust to green gold: Turning palm handicraft waste into high value bio based chemicals

New roadmap shows how to turn farm nitrogen models into real world water quality gains

Heart damage is common after an operation and often goes unnoticed, but patients who see a cardiologist may be less likely to die or suffer heart disease as a result

New tool exposes scale of fake research flooding cancer science

Researchers identify new blood markers that may detect early pancreatic cancer

Scientists uncover why some brain cells resist Alzheimer's disease

The Lancet: AI-supported mammography screening results in fewer aggressive and advanced breast cancers, finds full results from first randomized controlled trial

New AI tool improves treatment of cancer patients after heart attack

Kandahar University highlights global disparities in neurosurgical workforce and access to care

Research spotlight: Discovering risk factors for long-term relapse in alcohol use disorder

As fossil fuel use declines, experts urge planning and coordination to prevent chaotic collapse

Scientists identify the antibody's hinge as a structural "control hub"

Late-breaking study establishes new risk model for surgery after TAVR

To reduce CO2 emissions, policy on carbon pricing, taxation and investment in renewable energy is key

Kissing the sun: Unraveling mysteries of the solar wind

Breathing new life into nanotubes for a cooler planet

Machine learning reveals how to maximize biochar yield from algae

Inconsistent standards may be undermining global tracking of antibiotic resistance

Helping hands: UBCO research team develops brace to reduce tremors

MXene nanomaterials enter a new dimension

Hippocampus does more than store memories: it predicts rewards, study finds

New light-based nanotechnology could enable more precise, less harmful cancer treatment

The heritability of human lifespan is roughly 50%, once external mortality is addressed

Tracking Finland’s ice fishers reveals how social information guides foraging decisions

DNA-protein crosslinks promote inflammation-linked premature aging and embryonic lethality in mice

Accounting for fossil energy’s “minimum viable scale” is central to decarbonization

Immunotherapy reduces plaque in arteries of mice

Using AI to retrace the evolution of genetic control elements in the brain

[Press-News.org] Hospital rankings dramatically affected by calculation methods for readmissions and early deaths