This annual study identifies the nation's top providers of cardiovascular service, using the two most recent years of data.
View the complete list of Cardiovascular
award winners.
Findings
Based on comparisons between the Thomson 100 Top Hospitals: Cardiovascular Benchmarks Hospitals and a peer group limited
to similar high-volume hospitals, we estimate that:
- If peer hospitals (non-winners) provided the same quality of care as the
100 Top Hospitals, survival rates would increase by more than 7,000
patients each year.
- Complications of care could also decrease in peer hospitals. Nearly 750 additional patients could be complication-free.
In this year's study publication, we:
- Present new research showing that although survival is improving for hospital inpatients overall, pos-discharge mortality rates for heart attack and heart failure patients appear to be on the rise.
- Display
data for complete hospital performance reporting. This expands the 100 Top Hospitals benchmark
analysis to provide positive performance data to share with hospitals' communities,
and complements traditional benchmarks used for internal performance improvement.
- Provide performance measure data, identifying differences between benchmark
hospitals and their peers.
Methods
This study focuses on general and applicable
specialty, short-term, acute care, non-federal U.S. hospitals. In this study,
we focused on hospitals that treat a broad spectrum of cardiology patients, including
those undergoing:
- acute myocardial infarction (AMI)
- congestive heart failure (CHF)
- percutaneous coronary intervention (PCI)
- coronary artery bypass graft (CABG)
The data come from public sources — the Medicare Provider Analysis and Review
(MedPAR) data set, the Medicare Cost Report, and the CMS Hospital Compare data
set. We assign each hospital to one of three peer groups according to its teaching
and residency program status:
- Teaching Hospitals with Cardiovascular Residency
Programs
- Teaching Hospitals without Cardiovascular Residency Programs
- Community
Hospitals
The performance measures used in the 2007 study are:
- Risk-Adjusted Medical (AMI and CHF) Patient Mortality Index
- Risk-Adjusted Surgical (PCI and CABG) Patient Mortality Index
- Risk-Adjusted Complications Index (includes post-operative hemorrhages
and post-operative infections)
- Core Measures Score (includes AMI and CHF core measures)
- Percentage of CABG Patients with Internal Mammary Artery Use
- Procedure Volume Threshold
- Severity-Adjusted Average Length of Stay
- Severity- and Wage-Adjusted Cost per Case
For full details, the 2007 100 Top Hospitals study abstract is now available!
Click here for more information or
to order.
Make the 100 Top Hospitals study work for you:
Want to see how your hospital scored on the 100 Top Hospitals measures?
Order a Results Report to see how you
compare.
To understand how your hospital's 5-year performance improvement compares with
your peers, order a Performance Improvement
Leaders Report.
To understand what a 100 Top Hospitals: Cardiovascular Benchmarks For Success award means, download the brochure A Guide to the 100 Top Hospitals Cardiovascular Award.
For more information, email the 100 Top Hospitals Coordinator at
th.pubs@thomson.com
or call Thomson Healthcare Publications at (800) 568-3282 (option #3).