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Annual league tables of mortality in neonatal intensive care units: longitudinal study. International Neonatal Network and the Scottish Neonatal Consultants and Nurses Collaborative Study Group.

Authors :
Parry GJ
Gould CR
McCabe CJ
Tarnow-Mordi WO
Source :
BMJ (Clinical research ed.) [BMJ] 1998 Jun 27; Vol. 316 (7149), pp. 1931-5.
Publication Year :
1998

Abstract

Objective: To assess whether crude league tables of mortality and league tables of risk adjusted mortality accurately reflect the performance of hospitals.<br />Design: Longitudinal study of mortality occurring in hospital.<br />Setting: 9 neonatal intensive care units in the United Kingdom.<br />Subjects: 2671 very low birth weight or preterm infants admitted to neonatal intensive care units between 1988 and 1994.<br />Main Outcome Measures: Crude hospital mortality and hospital mortality adjusted using the clinical risk index for babies (CRIB) score.<br />Results: Hospitals had wide and overlapping confidence intervals when ranked by mortality in annual league tables; this made it impossible to discriminate between hospitals reliably. In most years there was no significant difference between hospitals, only random variation. The apparent performance of individual hospitals fluctuated substantially from year to year.<br />Conclusions: Annual league tables are not reliable indicators of performance or best practice; they do not reflect consistent differences between hospitals. Any action prompted by the annual league tables would have been equally likely to have been beneficial, detrimental, or irrelevant. Mortality should be compared between groups of hospitals using specific criteria-such as differences in the volume of patients, staffing policy, training of staff, or aspects of clinical practice-after adjusting for risk. This will produce more reliable estimates with narrower confidence intervals, and more reliable and rapid conclusions.

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
0959-8138
Volume :
316
Issue :
7149
Database :
MEDLINE
Journal :
BMJ (Clinical research ed.)
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
9641927
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1136/bmj.316.7149.1931