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Critical care medicine · Oct 2011
Multicenter Study Comparative StudyDefinition of mortality for trauma center performance evaluation: a comparative study.
- Lynne Moore, Alexis F Turgeon, Marcel Émond, Natalie Le Sage, and André Lavoie.
- Unité de traumatologie-urgence-soins intensifs, Centre de Recherche FRSQ du CHA, Département de médecine sociale et préventive, Hôpital de l'Enfant-Jésus, and Département de médecine d'urgence et médecine familiale, Université Laval, Québec, Canada. lynne.moore.cha@ssss.gouv.qc.ca
- Crit. Care Med.. 2011 Oct 1;39(10):2246-52.
ObjectiveMortality is widely used as a performance indicator to evaluate the quality of trauma care, but there is no consensus on the most appropriate definition. Our objective was to evaluate the influence of the definition of mortality in terms of the place (in-hospital or postdischarge) and time (30 days and 3, 6, and 12 months) of death on the results of trauma center performance evaluations according to the patients' ages.DesignMulticenter retrospective cohort study.SettingInclusive Canadian provincial trauma system.PatientsAdults admitted between 1999 and 2006 with a maximum abbreviated injury severity score≥3 (n=47,261).InterventionsNone.Measurements And Main ResultsTrauma registry data were linked to vital statistics data to obtain mortality up to 12 months postadmission. Observed mortality was compared to that expected according to provincial population mortality rates. Trauma center performance was evaluated with risk-adjusted mortality estimates. Agreement between performance results based on different definitions of mortality was evaluated with correlation coefficients; >.9 was considered acceptable. Analyses were stratified by predefined age categories (16-64, 65-84, and ≥85 yrs). A total of 3,338 patients (7%) died in-hospital, and 1,794 patients (4%) died postdischarge. Among patients 16-64 yrs old, 30-day hospital mortality represented 83% of all deaths and correlation coefficients across all definitions of mortality were >.9. In patients 65-84 yrs old, 30-day hospital mortality represented 52% of all deaths, observed mortality reached expected rates at around 6 months, and agreement across mortality definitions was low.ConclusionsWe observed an important variation in performance evaluation results across definitions of mortality, specifically in patients aged≥65 yrs. Half of the deaths among elders occurred later than 30 days following admission, including a significant number postdischarge. Results suggest that if performance evaluations include elderly patients, data on postdischarge mortality up to 6 months following admission are required.
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