Utilization Information
People are able to make better decisions
about health care when they are well-informed. For this reason,
residents of Maryland should use the Maryland Hospital Performance
Evaluation Guide to assist them when choosing where to receive
healthcare services. The Maryland Health Care Commission
carefully gathers information about the performance of Maryland
acute care hospitals in several areas. The information is
then presented in a way that compares one hospital to another
in the Hospital Guide. This section helps you to understand
the Hospital Guide by explaining where the Maryland Health
Care Commission gets its information and how it is used in
the Hospital Guide.
Source of Data Used for Analyses
Information in the Hospital Guide comes from reports submitted
by hospitals to the Maryland Health Services Cost Review
Commission. Additionally, the Maryland Health Care Commission
reviews similar reports from hospitals in Washington, D.C.
to include cases connected to Maryland hospitals such as
when a patient from a Maryland hospital goes to a hospital
in Washington, D.C. within 15 days after leaving the hospital.
To protect privacy, the information from
the Commission does not contain the names of patients or
any other information that could reveal someone’s identity.
It does include information about the care patients receive
at Maryland acute-care hospitals.
Types of Cases Not Included in
the Guide
Some cases from the Commission are not included because:
- Hospital billing claims (a primary source
of much of this information) are missing a discharge date.
- Cases are not from an acute-care hospital.
- The reason for discharge is marked as "left
against medical advice," "expired," or "transferred."
- Patients have a billing charge of zero.
(A zero billing charge marks cases that are initially billed
incorrectly and are later submitted as a different claim.)
- Patients are under age 18.
- Cases have a missing gender code.
- Patients are admitted to a facility
after an immediate transfer from another facility.
- Patients are discharged from one facility
and readmitted the same day to a different facility for
the same medical condition or for infection.
Selecting Diagnosis Related Groups
(DRGs) for the Hospital Performance Evaluation Guide
Diagnosis related groups (DRGs) are broad categories describing
general medical conditions that Maryland hospitals treat.
Over 30 DRGs for common medical conditions are included in
the Hospital Guide. To be included, at least 40 out of Maryland’s
47 acute-care hospitals must have had at least 20 discharges
in a previous year. Obstetric conditions are a new feature,
and the Commission is planning to develop specialized reports
on pediatrics in the future.
Calculating Hospital Discharges
Volume is calculated as the number of cases a hospital treats
for a particular medical condition. If a patient is admitted
and discharged twice for the same medical condition from
the same hospital, that patient would be counted twice
in the hospital's volume for that medical condition.
Calculating Length of Stay
Length of stay is calculated by subtracting the admission
date from the discharge date. If a patient is admitted and
discharged on the same date, the length of stay is counted
as one day.
Note: Length-of-stay rates are risk-adjusted.
(See information on Risk Adjustment Methodology below.)
Calculating Readmission Rates
Readmission rates describe how often a patient returns to
the hospital for additional treatment of the same or a
related condition. The cases included in the hospital volume,
as described previously, were checked to see whether they
were followed by readmission. To count as readmission status,
a patient must have been readmitted within 15 days of discharge
for a similar condition, or readmitted due to infection.
Infections were defined as admissions with a medical condition
of 18 or coded with certain DRGs (079, 080, 081, 089, 090,
091, 320, or 321).
Note: Readmission rates have been risk-adjusted.
(See information on Risk Adjustment Methodology below.)
Rating Hospitals Based on Readmission
Rates
To create the rating system based on readmission rates, the
following decision rules are applied:
- Ties are allocated to the more favorable
rating.
- Hospitals whose patients are re-admitted
less often to the same hospital for the same problem than
a majority (90%) of other hospitals in Maryland have lower
readmission rates. These hospitals are designated
by a filled circle in the sections of the Guide which compare
hospital volumes.
- Hospitals that are reporting that their
patients are re-admitted to the same hospital for the same
problem more often than a majority (80%) of other Maryland
hospitals have higher readmission rates. These hospitals
are designated by an empty circle in the volume sections
of the Guide.
- The remaining hospitals are assigned
a symbol of a half-filled circle.
Risk Adjustment Methodology
Some hospitals take care of patients who are sicker, or who
are at greater risk of developing complications, than the
average patient. Because they take care of a greater number
of patients with risky medical conditions, these hospitals
may have longer lengths of stay on record and higher readmission
rates. Other hospitals may have shorter lengths of stay
and lower readmission rates because a greater number of
their patients are not seriously ill. It is not appropriate
to compare all hospitals without compensating for the varying
levels of serious conditions they treat. Therefore, some
factors in the Hospital Guide have been “risk-adjusted.”
Risk- adjusting is a process that attempts
to insure that hospitals are compared fairly according to
an comparable group of patients. The risk adjustment process
takes into consideration the medical conditions, age, and
other factors about patients. These factors are used to adjust
a hospital's rates for length of stay and readmission to
show consumers how length of stay and readmission rates would
compare if all Maryland hospitals were treating patients
who were comparably ill or at risk of complications.
Risk-adjusting involves a special method
of calculating data (called APR-DRG), which adjusts the actual
length of stay and readmission numbers for each hospital
and each diagnosis according to the severity of illness of
the patients. For hospitals with more severely ill patients,
this method lowers the rates for length of stay and readmission.
For hospitals with less severely ill patients, it increases
the rates. Risk adjusting allows consumers to fairly compare
hospitals in a way that reflects the differences in care
delivered, rather than the differences in the patients. Additional
information on APR-DRG, developed by 3M, can be found at http://www.3m.com/us/healthcare/his/products/coding/refined_drg.jhtml. |