The Elsmar Cove Wiki More Free Files The Elsmar Cove Forums Discussion Thread Index Post Attachments Listing Failure Modes Services and Solutions to Problems Elsmar cove Forums Main Page Elsmar Cove Home Page
Google
  Web Elsmar.com
*Please be aware that SOME RECENT forum threads may not yet be indexed by Google.

View Full Version : Hospital benchmarking process - Rate of unplanned re-admissions


D.Salman
23rd May 2007, 07:24 AM
Dear Experts,
we are benchmarking our hospital with two other hospitals, for example , if the rate of unplanned re-admission rate is higher (worst) than the two hospitals, so what we suppose to do?
Thanks.

antoine.dias
23rd May 2007, 07:36 AM
Dear Experts,
we are benchmarking our hospital with two other hospitals, for example , if the rate of unplanned re-admission rate is higher (worst) than the two hospitals, so what we suppose to do?
Thanks.

I would :

1) Look for possible reasons why the rate is that high.
2) Look for appropriate action(s) against those reasons.
3) Check potential effect of the proposed action(s)
4) Implement those actions that are most effective.
5) Follow up on effectiveness.
6) Look for further improvement.
7) Start again at 1)

Hope this helps,

Best regards,

Antoine

M Greenaway
23rd May 2007, 07:36 AM
Find out why and fix it ?

Sorry if that sounds an abvious answer.

tyker
23rd May 2007, 07:46 AM
Dear Experts,
we are benchmarking our hospital with two other hospitals, for example , if the rate of unplanned re-admission rate is higher (worst) than the two hospitals, so what we suppose to do?
Thanks.

In addition to the prvious replies, make sure you are making a valid comparison. If one hospital carries out more complex medical treatment than the others, differences in the readmission rate may be understandable.

Can you get a bigger sample?

Is there any published data which would allow you to get a bigger picture and, hence, a more accurate benchmark?

M Greenaway
23rd May 2007, 10:47 AM
Indeed Tyker, what you suggest would be part of my 'find out why' response.

There are many reasons why this comparison shows some difference, does it even reflect that there is some superior quality in treatment at one location, as perhaps is the purpose of the benchmark excercise, or is it simply that they treat illnesses more prone to re-admission (as just one example of a mirriad of reasons) ?

Jim Wynne
23rd May 2007, 11:58 AM
Dear Experts,
we are benchmarking our hospital with two other hospitals, for example , if the rate of unplanned re-admission rate is higher (worst) than the two hospitals, so what we suppose to do?
Thanks.

There's been some good advice so far, but I think that unplanned readmissions might be information that a hospital might not be too eager to share; before you do a lot of work you might want to try and determine how accurate the reporting might be.