m
It’s Ok, Boss -
I’ll Cooka Da books
I’ve taken this article from The Daily Telegraph today; it
deals with the worrying tendency for hospitals to train their ‘coders’ to alter
the way deaths are recorded in their statistice. The government requires that
certain outcomes (that is patients who who die) so that hospitals can be
compared and bad practises spotted.
However if you come in for a hip replacement but you also
happen to have cancer, your death can be recorded as ‘palliative’ (you died of
cancer) even if it was really a badly performed hip replacement that was the
real cause.
It means the hospital can improve its figures even if
‘outcomes’are getting worse.
|
Percentage of deaths coded as palliative
|
|||||
2008
|
2009
|
2010
|
2011
|
2012
|
Increase
|
|
East
and North Hertfordshire NHS Trust
|
9.92%
|
12.31%
|
29.05%
|
38.84%
|
43.25%
|
33.33%
|
Guy's
and St Thomas' NHS Foundation Trust
|
1.18%
|
13.89%
|
32.47%
|
31.25%
|
31.65%
|
30.47%
|
King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
|
8.71%
|
17.49%
|
28.12%
|
40.09%
|
38.36%
|
29.65%
|
Royal
Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospitals NHS Trust
|
1.35%
|
9.91%
|
20.56%
|
21.91%
|
29.23%
|
27.88%
|
North
Middlesex University Hospital NHS Trust
|
4.76%
|
10.04%
|
17.42%
|
22.58%
|
31.48%
|
26.72%
|
Ipswich
Hospital NHS Trust
|
2.14%
|
3.65%
|
7.77%
|
9.33%
|
28.61%
|
26.46%
|
Central
Manchester University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
|
11.34%
|
6.25%
|
10.68%
|
10.12%
|
36.63%
|
25.29%
|
Buckinghamshire
Healthcare NHS Trust
|
7.56%
|
8.92%
|
24.64%
|
29.28%
|
32.13%
|
24.57%
|
Ashford
and St Peter's Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
|
0.32%
|
7.24%
|
4.00%
|
17.60%
|
23.04%
|
22.72%
|
The
Royal Bournemouth and Christchurch Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
|
9.91%
|
16.77%
|
32.21%
|
23.85%
|
32.52%
|
22.61%
|
Hinchingbrooke
Health Care NHS Trust
|
1.48%
|
4.27%
|
26.24%
|
29.96%
|
22.10%
|
20.62%
|
James Paget
University Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
|
2.44%
|
4.06%
|
15.73%
|
22.63%
|
22.50%
|
20.05%
|
Epsom
and St Helier University Hospitals NHS Trust
|
4.82%
|
16.06%
|
21.27%
|
22.18%
|
24.42%
|
19.60%
|
Aintree
University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
|
19.24%
|
20.18%
|
33.18%
|
39.87%
|
38.05%
|
18.82%
|
Sandwell
and West Birmingham Hospitals NHS Trust
|
2.76%
|
0.74%
|
3.89%
|
19.24%
|
21.53%
|
18.77%
|
Frimley
Park Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
|
9.51%
|
18.36%
|
16.67%
|
17.88%
|
27.89%
|
18.38%
|
South
London Healthcare NHS Trust
|
8.04%
|
13.22%
|
24.46%
|
26.03%
|
25.95%
|
17.91%
|
Salford
Royal NHS Foundation Trust
|
12.36%
|
20.89%
|
25.94%
|
29.89%
|
30.19%
|
17.83%
|
Peterborough
and Stamford Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust
|
2.79%
|
15.04%
|
20.69%
|
17.44%
|
20.05%
|
17.26%
|
Milton
Keynes Hospital NHS Foundation Trust
|
2.59%
|
10.98%
|
13.35%
|
8.83%
|
19.59%
|
17.00%
|
National
Average
|
9.11%
|
14.35%
|
15.53%
|
16.05%
|
17.24%
|
8.13%
|
Telegraph.co.uk
Friday 18
April 2014
Fears that
hospitals are covering up death rates
New data
triggers fears that hospitals are 'fiddling the figures' on hospital deaths by
increasing the number of deaths recorded as 'palliative' - classed as expected
because a patient was terminally ill.
By Laura Donnelly, Health Editor and Telegraph
interactive team
Hospitals
have been accused of “fiddling” their death rate figures by claiming patients
were terminally ill, after new figures showing dramatic changes in the way
mortality is recorded.
The NHS
data shows a five-fold rise in the proportion of deaths being “coded” so that
they barely count towards hospital mortality statistics - with some trusts now
recording one in three deaths as a “palliative” case.
Last night
experts said they were troubled by the “deeply concerning” trends, fearing hospitals
could be hiding the fact patients had suffered poor care which contributed to
their death.
They said
the scale of the misreporting was such that it could even hide “another Mid
Staffs” scandal.
Every NHS
hospital has to collect and publish data showing how its death rates compare
with what would be expected.
Crucially,
if a case is coded as “palliative” it barely counts towards the rate, because
it is classed as an expected death.
The code is
only supposed to be used when a patient’s death in hospital is an inevitable
consequence of their condition - such as that from a terminal illness.
Now new
figures have triggered concern that the code is in fact being used to disguise
many more deaths.
Data from
health analysts Dr Foster shows that, across England in 2012/13, 36,425 deaths
were coded as palliative. That was 17.3 per cent of the total number of deaths
- twice the number recorded in 2008 and five times the 3.3 per cent of deaths
recorded in 2006.
Roger
Taylor, director of research at healthcare analysts Dr Foster Intelligence,
which produced the data, said there were “real concerns around the gaming of
indicators”, adding: “Whether or not you are doing it deliberately, the end
result is that the variation in coding may disguise poor outcomes.”
He said:
“The trends we are seeing are troubling - they are deeply concerning. Poor
quality data is harming patients because you can’t see where things are going
wrong. If the data is not being recorded consistently and, moreover, if that
isn’t picked up because of a lack of auditing there is a risk that poor patient
care is being disguised, and the public misled.”
Experts
said that in some cases, patients were being counted as “palliative cases” when
they had been admitted to hospital for a broken hip, but failed to recover.
Mr Taylor
said he had called repeatedly on NHS officials to tighten the rules, and to
audit such data, so that trusts could not manipulate it, but said nothing had
been done.
“We’re
worried this issue is not being given sufficient priority,” he said. “The
bottom line is it could increase the possibility of failing to identify another
Mid Staffs and potentially cost lives.”
Joyce
Robins, from Patient Concern, said: “Hospitals are clearly fiddling these
figures and that frightens me. Hospitals are just not open enough to admit what
is happening - instead they dream new ways to disguise it. All the talk of
transparency is just that - talk.”
Prof Sir
Brian Jarman, Emeritus Professor of Imperial College London, an expert on
mortality data, said: “I don’t think these very extreme changes reflect
reality. I don’t think these hospitals have transformed into hospices to treat
the dying overnight.”
Figures
show that among the 20 NHS trusts with the steepest rise in palliative coding,
between 2008 and 2012, 17 reduced their published death rate at the same time.
At East and
North Hertfordshire trust the proportion of deaths which were explained as
“palliative” quadrupled - from 9.92 per cent in 2008 to 43.25 per cent in 2012.
Over the
same time, the trust’s death rate fell from 14 per cent higher than would be
expected, to 3 per cent below.
At North
Middlesex University Hospital trust the proportion of deaths coded “palliative”
rose from 4.76 per cent to 31.48 per cent, the analysis shows.
Meanwhile,
death rates fell from 6.8 per cent higher than expected to 12.2 per cent below.
At Guy’s
and St Thomas’ NHS Foundation trust, the percentage rose from 1.18 per cent to
31.65 per cent.
At Kings
College Hospital Foundation trust it rose from 8.71 per cent to 38.36 per cent,
while at Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospitals NHS trust, the
percentage rose from 1.35 per cent to 29.23 per cent.
Gary
Walker, a former NHS trust chief executive who lost his job after raising
concerns about patient safety, said the figures looked “very suspicious”
warning: “In the NHS, if it looks like a trust is fiddling the numbers it
probably is.”
Charlotte
Leslie, a Conservative MP and member of the House of Commons health committee,
said: “This is very worrying data. We already know that at the time of the Mid
Staffs scandals, hospitals were fiddling the figures to massage their mortality
rates.”
“These
figures suggest that hospitals are still fiddling the figures to put their own
reputation and that of their managers ahead of patient safety.
A
Department of Health spokesman said: “The NHS needs high quality mortality
data. We would expect that all NHS Trusts have robust auditing systems in
place.”
East and
North Hertfordshire trust said it was one of only a handful of hospital groups
to run an NHS hospice and that a recent external reviews showed its coding was
accurate.
North
Middlesex University Hospital trust said the increase in deaths coded as
palliative was due to better recording, as did Guy’s and St Thomas’ NHS
Foundation trust which also said that as one of the largest providers of
services for patients with cancer, it was to be expected that it would have
higher than average rates of palliative coding.
Kings
College Hospital Foundation trust said its rise was down to improvements
recording palliative care. Royal Liverpool and Broadgreen University Hospitals
NHS trust said it refuted any suggestion that changes were a result of any
attempt to deliberately improve mortality rates, and said it coded palliative
care patients with incurable diseases accurately.
In total,
twenty trusts saw a rise of at least 17 percentage points in the number of
deaths coded as palliative between 2008 and 2012, the statistics (listed in
table above) show.
Ipswich
Hospital said it its coding levels had been lower than average until a review
of cases, which found too many patients in recepit of end-of-life care had not
been properly recorded.
Buckinghamshire
Healthcare NHS Trust said it had taken over the running of an 11-bedded hospice
and that its palliative care team “work very closely with our acute wards and
other inpatient community hospitals to ensure our end of life patients receive
high quality care.”
Ashford and
St Peter’s Hospitals foundation trust said the increase was a result of changes
to palliative care coding criteria and improved record keeping and that it was
“confident that our current data accurately reflects the trust’s specialiast
palliative activity.”
The Royal
Bournemouth and Christchurch Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust said “Unlike most
acute hospitals in the country, we have a specialist palliative care unit – our
Macmillan Unit – on site. Locally more patients will appropriately spend the
end of their life in our hospital because of the presence of this hugely
respected facility.”
Hinchingbrooke
Health Care NHS Trust said it became aware it was under-reporting palliative
care mortality in 2009, and employed a palliative care consultant to jointly
carry out an audit of coding practices with Dr Foster, which led to changes.
James Paget
University Hospitals Foundation trust said the increases in coding were
historical, and that coding had been improved after an external audit found the
trust was not recording palliative care coding in line with national guidance.
Epsom and
St Helier University Hospitals Trust said: “The percentage rise in deaths coded
as palliative care since 2008 reflects increased education and training of
clinical staff to communicate appropriate end of life care plans for the dying
patient and better documentation in the patient notes.”
Peterborough
and Stamford Hospitals NHS Foundation Trust said its coding department “works
extremely hard with our palliative care team to ensure that documentation is
clearly marked” and had improved the accruacy of its data, which accounted for
the change.
Sandwell
and West Birmingham Hospitals trust said it “has embarked on a programme of
work systematically looking at the causes of death in hospital which has
resulted in a substantial reduction in avoidable mortality.”
Aintree
University Hospital NHS Foundation Trust said: “Aintree has an excellent
palliative care service, as recently noted by an independent external clinical
review. "
Neil Harris
(a don’t stop till you drop production)
Home: helpmesortoutthenhs.blogspot.comContact: neilwithpromisestokeep@gmail.com
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