articleJAMAApr 25, 2006Closed access

Association Between Hospital Process Performance and Outcomes Among Patients With Acute Coronary Syndromes

Clinical Research Institute · Duke University · +5 more institutions

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Abstract

Objectives

To evaluate contemporary care practices consistent with the American College of Cardiology/American Heart Association (ACC/AHA) guideline recommendations, to examine how hospital performance varied among centers, to identify characteristics predictive of higher guideline adherence, and to assess whether hospitals' overall composite guideline adherence was associated with observed and risk-adjusted in-hospital mortality rates. DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: An observational analysis of hospital care in 350 academic and nonacademic US centers of 64,775 patients enrolled in the CRUSADE (Can Rapid Risk Stratification of Unstable Angina Patients Suppress Adverse Outcomes With Early Implementation of the ACC/AHA Guidelines) National Quality Improvement Initiative between January 1, 2001, and September 30, 2003, presenting with chest pain and positive electrocardiographic changes or cardiac biomarkers consistent with non-ST-segment elevation acute coronary syndrome (ACS). MAIN OUTCOME MEASURES: Use of 9 ACC/AHA class I guideline-recommended treatments and the correlation among hospitals' use of individual care processes as well as overall composite adherence rates.

Results

Overall, the 9 ACC/AHA guideline-recommended treatments were adhered to in 74% of eligible instances. There was modest correlation in hospital performance among the individual ACS process metrics. However, composite adherence performance varied widely (median [interquartile range] composite adherence scores from lowest to highest hospital quartiles, 63% [59%-66%] vs 82% [80%-84%]). Composite guideline adherence rate was significantly associated with in-hospital mortality, with observed mortality rates decreasing from 6.31% for the lowest adherence quartile to 4.15% for the highest adherence quartile (P

Citation impact

674
total citations
FWCI
36.43
Percentile
100%
References
32
Citations per year

Authors

12

Topics & keywords

Keywords
  • Medicine
  • Acute coronary syndrome
  • Internal medicine
  • Association (psychology)
  • Emergency medicine
  • Intensive care medicine
  • Myocardial infarction
UN Sustainable Development Goals
  • Good health and well-being
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