
@article{ref1,
title="Risk-adjusted rates for potentially avoidable reoperations were computed from routine hospital data",
journal="Journal of clinical epidemiology",
year="2007",
author="Halfon, Patricia and Eggli, Yves and Matter, M. and Kallay, Christine and van Melle, Guy and Burnand, Bernard",
volume="60",
number="1",
pages="56-67",
abstract="OBJECTIVES: Reoperations may reflect a suboptimal initial surgical treatment. The study aimed to develop a screening algorithm for those potentially avoidable, using only routinely collected hospital data and a prediction model to adjust rates for case-mix. STUDY DESIGN AND SETTING: Data of a 3-year random sample of 7,370 therapeutic operations on inpatients, among which 833 were followed-up by a reoperation during the same stay. A review of medical records identified clearly avoidable and other potentially avoidable reoperations to develop and test the screening algorithm. A logistic prediction model of potentially avoidable reoperations was developed on one randomly chosen half of the data (about 9,000 interventions) and tested on the other half (cross-validation). RESULTS: Two hundred thirty-seven interventions (3%) were followed by a potentially avoidable reoperation, among which 144 were clearly avoidable. The screening algorithm had a sensitivity of 75% and a specificity of 72%. Predictors of potentially avoidable reoperations were surgery categories, diagnosis related conditions, and experiencing prior surgery. The risk score, based on these variables, showed at once a satisfactory discriminative performance (C-statistic=0.76) and goodness-of-fit measure on the validation set. CONCLUSION: The adjusted rate of potentially avoidable reoperations should be included in internal reporting of hospital quality indicators, but further validated in various settings.<p /> <p>Language: en</p>",
language="en",
issn="0895-4356",
doi="10.1016/j.jclinepi.2006.03.013",
url="http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.jclinepi.2006.03.013"
}