Hospitals are risky places – but some are better than others
- Written by Stephen Duckett, Director, Health Program, Grattan Institute
One in every nine patients who go into hospital in Australia suffers a complication: when something preventable goes wrong with their care. They might develop an infection from a hygiene breach, for instance, or be given the wrong dose or type of drug.
Or the complication might be less direct, such as becoming malnourished because you haven’t been monitored well enough, or developing a pressure sore because you’ve spent too long in the same position in your hospital bed.
A new Grattan Institute report, All complications should count: Using our data to make hospitals safer, reveals the risk of a complication varies markedly between hospitals. It argues that patients need to know about these risks, and hospitals need to have this information to help them reduce risks for patients.
Read more: Why you should avoid hospitals in January
Australian hospitals collect a lot of information about the patients they treat. This information is used to work out how much each hospital is paid for the work they do. But it should also be a powerful tool for improving safety of care.
Rate of complications
Our report shows that the rate of complications for people admitted for a same-day treatment is very low, around 3%. But an astounding one in four patients who have an overnight stay endures a complication.
The rate of complications varies markedly between hospitals. We have data on every complication and every hospital, although the hospitals are de-identified. The potential value of this data is illustrated by the graph below, which looks at just one procedure – knee replacements – at three hospitals.
Authors: Stephen Duckett, Director, Health Program, Grattan Institute
Read more http://theconversation.com/hospitals-are-risky-places-but-some-are-better-than-others-91057