Institution of monthly anesthesia quality reports does not reduce postoperative complications despite improved metric compliance Journal Article


Authors: McCormick, P. J.; Yeoh, C. B.; Hannum, M.; Tan, K. S.; Vicario-Feliciano, R. M.; Mehta, M.; Yang, G.; Ervin, K.; Fischer, G. W.; Tollinche, L. E.
Article Title: Institution of monthly anesthesia quality reports does not reduce postoperative complications despite improved metric compliance
Abstract: While quality programs have been shown to improve provider compliance, few have demonstrated conclusive improvements in patient outcomes. We hypothesized that there would be increased metric compliance and decreased postoperative complications after initiation of an anesthesiology quality improvement program at our institution. We performed a retrospective study of all adult inpatients having anesthesia for a twelve-month period that spanned six months before and after program implementation. The primary outcome was the rate of complications in the post-implementation period. Secondary outcomes included the change in proportion of complications and compliance with quality metrics. We studied a total of 9620 adult inpatient cases, subdivided into pre- and post-implementation groups (4832 vs 4788.) After multivariate model adjustment, the rate of any complication (our primary outcome) was not significantly changed (32% to 31%; adjusted P = 0.410.) Of the individual complications, only wound infection (2.0% to 1.5%; adjusted P = 0.020) showed a statistically significant decrease. Statistically and clinically significant increases in compliance were seen for the BP-02 Avoiding Monitoring Gaps metric (81% to 93%, P < 0.001), both neuromuscular blockade metrics (NMB-01 76% to 91%, P < 0.001; NMB-02 95% to 97%, P = 0.006), both tidal volume metrics (PUL-01 84% to 93%, P < 0.001; PUL-02 30% to 45%, P < 0.001), and the TEMP-02 Core Temperature Measurement metric (88% to 94%, P < 0.001). Implementation of a comprehensive quality feedback program improved metric compliance but was not associated with a change in postoperative complications. © 2020, Springer Science+Business Media, LLC, part of Springer Nature.
Keywords: perioperative complications; quality improvement; outcome measures; automated feedback; physician evaluation
Journal Title: Journal of Medical Systems
Volume: 44
Issue: 11
ISSN: 0148-5598
Publisher: Springer  
Date Published: 2020-11-01
Start Page: 189
Language: English
DOI: 10.1007/s10916-020-01659-7
PUBMED: 32964363
PROVIDER: scopus
PMCID: PMC8041098
DOI/URL:
Notes: Article -- Source: Scopus
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MSK Authors
  1. Cindy Beng-Imm Yeoh
    35 Yeoh
  2. Meghana Mehta
    18 Mehta
  3. Kay See   Tan
    241 Tan
  4. Gloria Yang
    16 Yang
  5. Gregory Walter Fischer
    40 Fischer
  6. Margaret L Hannum
    17 Hannum