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- Title
Impact of a standardized heart failure order set on mortality, readmission, and quality and costs of care.
- Authors
Ballard, David J.; Ogola, Gerald; Fleming, Neil S.; Stauffer, Brett D.; Leonard, Bradley M.; Khetan, Rainer; Yancy, Clyde W.
- Abstract
Objective To determine the impact of a standardized heart failure order set on mortality, readmission, and quality and costs of care. Design Observational study. Setting Eight acute care hospitals and two specialty heart hospitals. Participants All adults (>18 years) discharged from one of the included hospitals between December 2007 and March 2009 with a diagnosis of heart failure, who had not undergone heart transplant, did not have a left ventricular assistive device, and with a length of stay of 120 or less days. Interventions A standardized heart failure order set was developed internally, with content driven by the prevailing American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association clinical practice guidelines, and deployed systemwide via an intranet physician portal. Main Outcome Measures Publicly reported process of care measures, in-patient mortality, 30-day mortality, 30-day readmission, length of stay, and direct cost of care were compared for heart failure patients treated with and without the order set. Results Order set used reached 73.1% in March 2009. After propensity score adjustment, order set use was associated with significantly increased core measures compliance [odds ratio (95% confidence interval) = 1.51(1.08; 2.12)] and reduced in-patient mortality [odds ratio (95% confidence interval) = 0.49(0.28; 0.88)]. Reductions in 30-day mortality and readmission approached significance. Direct cost for initial admissions alone and in combination with readmissions were significantly lower with order set use. Conclusions Implementing an evidence-based standardized order set may help improve outcomes, reduce costs of care and increase adherence to evidence-based processes of care.
- Subjects
MEDICAL care costs; HEART failure; HEART disease related mortality; HOSPITAL admission &; discharge; MEDICAL quality control; HEART transplantation; LENGTH of stay in hospitals; CONFIDENCE intervals
- Publication
International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 2010, Vol 22, Issue 6, p437
- ISSN
1353-4505
- Publication type
Article
- DOI
10.1093/intqhc/mzq051