Hospital Acquired Complications in South Australian major public hospitals

Author:

Edwards Michael J1ORCID,Duke Graeme J23ORCID,Hakendorf Paul4,Verghese Santosh15,Bihari Shailesh14

Affiliation:

1. Intensive & Critical Care, Flinders Medical Centre, Adelaide, Australia

2. Eastern Health Intensive Care Research, Box Hill & Maroondah & Angliss Hospitals, Melbourne, Australia

3. Intensive Care Service, Eastern Health, Box Hill & Maroondah & Angliss Hospitals, Melbourne, Australia

4. College of Medicine and Public Health, Flinders University, Adelaide, Australia

5. SA Health, Adelaide, Australia

Abstract

The prevalence of Hospital Acquired Complications (HACs) within major hospitals and intensive care units (ICUs) is often used as an indication of care quality. We performed a retrospective cohort study of acute care separations from four adult public hospitals in the state of South Australia, Australia. Data were derived from the Integrated South Australian Activity Collection (ISAAC) database, subdivided into those admitted to ICU or non-ICU (Ward) in tertiary referral or (other major) metropolitan hospitals. During the five-year study period (1 July 2013 to 30 June 2018), there were 471,934 adult separations with 65,133 HAC events reported in 43,987 (9.32%) at a mean rate of 13.8 (95% confidence interval (CI) 13.7 to 13.9) HAC events per 100 separations and 18.5 (95% CI 18.4 to 18.7) per 1000 bed days. The Ward cohort accounted for the majority (430,583 (91.2%)) of separations, in-hospital deaths (6928 (66.4%)) and HAC events (29,826 (67.8%)). The smaller ICU cohort (41,351 (8.76%)) had a higher mortality rate (8.46% versus 1.61%; P < 0.001), longer length of stay (median 10.0 (interquartile range (IQR) 6.0–18.0) days versus 4.0 (IQR 3.0–8.0) days P < 0.001), and higher HAC prevalence (62.1 (95% CI 61.3 to 62.9) versus 9.16 (95% CI 9.07 to 9.25) per 100 separations P < 0.001). Both ICU and Ward HAC prevalence rates were higher in tertiary referral than major metropolitan hospitals ( P < 0.001). In conclusion, higher HAC prevalence rates in the ICU and tertiary referral cohorts may be due to high-risk patient cohorts, variable provision of care, or both, and warrants urgent clinical investigation and further research.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine,Critical Care and Intensive Care Medicine

Reference16 articles.

1. Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care, safetyandquality.gov.au/our-work/indicators/hospital-acquired-complications (2020, accessed October 2021).

2. The state of patient safety and quality in Australian hospitals 2019, safetyandquality.gov.au/publications-and-resources/state-patient-safety-and-quality-australian-hospitals-2019 (accessed October 2021).

3. A classification of hospital‐acquired diagnoses for use with routine hospital data

4. Council on Federal Financial Relations. ACT: National Health Reform, federalfinancialrelations.gov.au/content/national_health_reform.aspx (accessed April 2021).

5. Clinical review: Scoring systems in the critically ill

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