The American Journal of Surgery
Volume 198, Issue 5, Supplement , Pages S28-S35, November 2009

Adjusted or unadjusted outcomes

Presented at the NSQIP 15th Anniversary Meeting and Festschrift in memory of Shukri F. Khuri, M.D.

  • Aaron S. Fink, M.D.

      Affiliations

    • Corresponding Author InformationCorresponding author. Tel.: +1 404 728 7621; fax: +1 404 327 4971

Surgical Service, Veteran Affairs Medical Center, Atlanta, Decatur, GA; Department of Surgery, Emory University School of Medicine, Atlanta, GA, USA

Received 2 June 2009; received in revised form 23 July 2009

Abstract 

Background

Surgeons have long maintained an interest in assessing the outcomes of their therapeutic efforts. Previously, such goals were supported by mortality and morbidity conferences or surgical audits. The latter typically focus on unadjusted rates of adverse events. While comparisons of these outcome metrics between individuals or institutions are held to portray quality of surgical care, such comparisons are compromised by the divergent risk profiles associated with the patient population in question, underscoring the import of adequate and validated risk adjustment measures. Numerous risk adjustment strategies have been developed, based either on more readily available, and thus less expensive, administrative claims data or on more reliable and robust, but more expensive, clinical data. The National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (NSQIP), which is requires abstraction of clinical data, stands as the “gold standard” for assessment of surgical quality.

Data sources

While risk adjustment seems essential to truly assess surgical quality, alternatives to use of clinical data continue to be explored. Some alternatives from previous works published by the author and others are briefly reviewed in this presentation.

Conclusions

When assessing the quality of surgical outcomes, risk adjustment seems superior. Ongoing research is needed to help achieve balance between the benefit of clinically based models and less expensive alternatives based on administrative data.

Keywords: Outcomes assessment, Risk adjustment, Administrative vs Clinical data

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PII: S0002-9610(09)00462-0

doi:10.1016/j.amjsurg.2009.08.001

The American Journal of Surgery
Volume 198, Issue 5, Supplement , Pages S28-S35, November 2009