Joint Commission Names Top Hospitals for Evidence-Based Care
On Wednesday, the Joint Commission recognized 620 U.S. hospitals as top-performers in adhering to evidence-based care practices that enhance patient outcomes, Kaiser Health News' "Capsules" reports (Rau, "Capsules," Kaiser Health News, 9/19).
The second annual list recognizes 53% more hospitals than last year's list, which recognized 405 hospitals.
Overall, the 2012 list recognized roughly 18% of the more than 3,300 Joint Commission-accredited hospitals that report quality data as "top performers", and 244 hospitals achieved the distinction in both 2011 and 2012 (McKinney, Modern Healthcare, 9/19).
How the Commission Identifies 'Top Performers'
For its 2012 report, the Joint Commission analyzed the performance of accredited hospitals on 45 accountability measures included in the organization's Key Quality Measures program for all of 2011. The measures are related to myocardial infarction, heart failure, pneumonia, surgical care, stroke care and children's asthma care, among others.
To be recognized as a "Top Performer on Key Quality Measures," a hospital had to meet or exceed 95% performance on a composite score that included all accountability measures reported to the Joint Commission, including those with fewer than 30 eligible cases. It also had to meet or exceed 95% performance on all accountability measures, excluding measures with fewer than 30 eligible cases.
In addition to the 18% of the hospitals recognized as "Top Performers," another 17% of the hospitals -- or 583 hospitals -- dropped just one measure short of the 95% benchmark (Joint Commission release, 9/19).
Report Shows Overall Improvements in Hospital Performance
Overall, the seventh annual "Improving America's Hospitals" report -- which draws on data that all accredited hospitals report to the Joint Commission -- showed that hospitals have continued to improve on all accountability measures across the past 10 years (Joint Commission release, 9/19).
For example, the data show that hospitals in 2011 achieved 96.6% composite performance on 16.1 million opportunities to perform care processes related to accountability measures, up from an 81.8% composite performance on 957,000 opportunities in 2002 (Joint Commission report, 9/19).
In addition, the report found that:
- Heart attack care adhered to evidence-based guidelines in 98.5% of cases in 2011, up from 88.6% in 2002;
- Pneumonia care result increased from 72.4% in 2002 to 96.2% in 2011; and
- Surgical care result increased from 82.1% in 2005 to 97.6% in 2011 (Joint Commission release, 9/19).
Joint Commission President Mark Chassin said, "Better performance will help hospitals meet the valued-based purchasing requirements of federal and state governments and private payers."
He adds, "Day-to-day progress will slowly but surely transform todayâs health care system into one that achieves unprecedented performance outcomes for the benefit of the patients we serve" (Joint Commission report, 9/19).
This is part of the California Healthline Daily Edition, a summary of health policy coverage from major news organizations. Sign up for an email subscription.