Volume 43 | Number 1p1 | February 2008

Abstract List

Alan N. West, William B. Weeks, James P. Bagian


Objective

To assess Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality's Patient Safety Indicators (PSIs) as performance measures using Veterans Administration hospitalization data.


Data Sources Study Setting

Nine years (1997–2005) of all Veterans Health Administration (VA) administrative hospital discharge data.


Study Design

Retrospective analysis using diagnoses and procedures to derive annual rates and standard errors for 13 PSIs.


Data Collection/Extraction Methods

For either hospitals or hospital networks (Veterans Integrated Service Networks [VISNs]), we calculated the percentages whose PSI rates were consistently high or low across years, as well as 1‐year lagged correlations, for each PSI. We related our findings to the average annual number of adverse events that each PSI represents. We also assessed time trends for the entire VA, by VISN, and by hospital.


Principal Findings

PSI rates are more stable for VISNs than for individual hospitals, but only for those PSIs that reflect the most frequent adverse events. Only the most frequent PSIs yield significant time trends, and only for larger systems.


Conclusions

Because they are so rare, PSIs are not reliable performance measures to compare individual hospitals. The most frequent PSIs are more stable when applied to hospital networks, but needing large patient samples nullifies their potential value to managers seeking to improve quality locally or to patients seeking optimal care.