NOTE: NQF-endorsed® patient safety measures endorsed before June 2009, as well as new patient safety measures with a focus on high-volume complications including pressure ulcers, falls, venous thromboembolism, healthcare-associated infections (HAIs), safe discharge, avoidance of readmission, and medication safety, were reviewed in this project.
Access the Endorsement Summary (PDF) | Access the Phase 1 Report | Access the Phase 2 Report
The Opportunity
Medical errors and unsafe care kill tens of thousands of Americans each year. NQF’s National Voluntary Consensus Standards for the Reporting of Healthcare-Associated Infection Data reports that “an estimated 2 million HAIs alone occur each year in the United States, accounting for an estimated 90,000 deaths and adding $4.5 billion to $5.7 billion in healthcare costs.”1 The Enters for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) estimate that HAIs cost U.S. hospitals at least 5.7 billion per year, and potentially up to $31.5 billion.2
Falls and pressure ulcers are also high cost and high volume adverse events. Falls are the leading cause of injury-related death for individuals 65 and older, and it is estimated that patient falls among the elderly will cost over $30 billion by 2020.3,4 In 2007, there were 257,412 reported cases of Medicare patients who had a pressure ulcer as a secondary diagnosis during hospitalization—these cases had an average charge of $43,180.5 In addition, beginning October 1, 2008, Medicare no longer reimburses for either the extra cost of treating Category/ Stage III and IV pressure ulcers that occur while the patient is in the hospital or the extra cost of treatment for serious injuries resulting from falls.
HAIs, falls, and pressure ulcers, while occurring in relatively high numbers, are only a few of the many types of patient safety-related events that occur in healthcare settings. The costs are passed on in a number of ways—premiums, taxes, lost work time and wages, and health threats, to name a few. Proactively addressing unsafe care will protect patients from harm and lead to more affordable, effective, and equitable care.
About the Project
This project began in June 2011.
Objectives
This project sought to identify and endorse new performance measures for accountability and quality improvement that address patient safety, and, specifically, complications of health care. Additionally, consensus standards related to patient safety endorsed by NQF before 2009 also will be evaluated under the maintenance process. This project is being conducted in two phases. The first phase addressed measures related to venous thromboembolism, medication safety, and surgical safety, among other subjects. Topics addressed in the second phase included falls, pressure ulcers, and healthcare associated infections.
NQF Process
Measures were considered for NQF endorsement as national voluntary consensus standards. Consensus on the recommendations developed through NQF’s format Consensus Development Process (CDP, Version 1.8).
NQF Member and public comment was sought on all parts of the project.
Funding
This project was supported under a contract provided by the Department of Health and Human Services in support of the Affordable Care Act (ACA).
Related NQF Work
- National Quality Forum (NQF), Serious Reportable Events in Healthcare–2011 Update, Washington, DC: NQF; 2011, In press.
- NQF, Safe Practices for Better Healthcare–2010 Update, Washington, DC: NQF; 2010.
- NQF, National Voluntary Consensus Standards for the Reporting of Healthcare-Associated Infection Data: A Consensus Report, Washington, DC: NQF; 2008.
Contact Information
For further information, email patientsafety@qualityforum.org.
Footnotes:
- NQF, National Voluntary Consensus Standards for the Reporting of Healthcare-Associated Infection Data: A Consensus Report, Washington, DC: NQF; 2008.
- Scott RD,The Direct Medical Costs of Healthcare-Associated Infections in U.S. Hospitals and the Benefits of Prevention, Division of Healthcare Quality Promotion, National Center for Preparedness, Detection, and Control of Infectious Diseases; Coordinatging Center for Infectious Diseases, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention; March 2009.
- CDC, 2006: Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. National Center for Injury Prevention and Control. Web-based Injury Statistics Query and Reporting System (WISQARS). Available at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/hospitalacqcond/. Last aceessed October 30, 2009.
- UlrichR, Zimring C. The Role of the Physical Environment in the Hospital of the 21st Century: A Once-in-a-Lifetime Opportunity. Concord, CA: The Center for Health Design; 2004 Sept.
- Armstrong DG, Ayello EA, Capitulo KL, et al. New opportunities to improve pressure ulcer prevention and treatment: implications of the CMS inpatient hospital care present on admission indicators/hospital-acquired conditions policy -- a consensus paper from the International Expert Wound Care Advisory Panel. Adv Skin Wound Care 2008; 21:469-470, 472-478.
This endorsement maintenance project addressed complication-related measures. Specific complication-related domains that were scheduled for maintenance include pressure ulcers, falls, medication safety, and venous thromboembolism.
NQF sought a wide range of stakeholder perspectives to provide expertise on Patient Safety Measures: Complications.
The Call for Nominations for Steering Committee members closed on July 15, 2011. For more information on the nominations process, please refer to the Call for Nominations (PDF) document.
This
project includes maintenance review of a number of Patient Safety measures endorsed before 2009. As a part of the maintenance review
process, NQF sought comments on the implementation and use of these
measures, particularly all stakeholders’ experiences with the measures.
See detailed information in the Call for Implementation Comments (PDF)
document.
The Steering Committee began meeting in September 2011 to evaluate the submissions and prepare the draft report.
MEASURES TO BE REVIEWED:
Medication Safety
0022 - Use of high risk medications in the elderly
0419 - Documentation of current medications
Venous Thromboembolism
0371 - VTE prophylaxis
0372 - ICU VTE prophylaxis
0373 - VTE with anticoagulant overlap therapy
0374 - VTE patients receiving unfractionated heparin
0375 - VTE warfarin discharge instructions
0376 - Potentially preventable VTE
0450 - Post-op PE or deep vein thrombosis rate (revised)
Surgery
0267 - Wrong site, wrong side, wrong patient
0344 - Accidental puncture or laceration rate (PDI 1)
0345 - Accidental puncture or laceration rate (PSI 15)
0349 - Transfusion reaction (PSI 16)
0350 - Transfusion reaction (PDI 13)
0362 - Foreign body left after procedure (PDI 3)
0363 - Foreign body left after procedure (PSI 5)
Care Coordination
0263 - Patient burn
0346 - Iatrogenic pneumothorax rate (PSI 6)
0348 - Iatrogenic pneumothorax rate (PDI 5)
0501 - Confirmation of ET Placement
0523 - Pain assessment conducted
0524 - Pain Interventions implemented
The Patient Safety Complications Workgroup met via conference call on December 2, 2011. This meeting was open to members and the public.
The Patient Safety Complications Workgroup met on December 9, 2011. The meeting was open to the members and the public.
The Patient Safety Complications Workgroup met via conference call on December 5, 2011. This meeting was open to members and the public
The Patient Safety Complications Workgroup met via conference
call on December 6, 2011. This meeting was open to members and the public.
The Steering
Committee met on December 15-16, 2011 at the National Quality Forum, 1030
15th Street, NW, 9th Floor, Washington DC.
The Steering Committee had a follow-up conference call on January 31 to continue reviewing several measures.
MEASURES TO BE REVIEWED:
Falls, Pressure Ulcers
0035 - Fall Risk Management
0101 - Falls: Screening, Risk-assessment and Plan of Care (updated)
0141 - Patient Fall Rate
0202 - Falls with Injury
0266 - Patient Fall
0337 - Pressure Ulcer Rate (PDI 2)
0537 - Multifactor Fall Risk Assessment Conducted in Patients 65 and Older
0538 - Pressure Ulcer Prevention and Care (updated)
HAIs, Mortality, Staffing, and Other
0204 - Skill Mix (Registered Nurse [RN], Licensed Vocation/Practical Nurse [LVN/LPN], unlicensed assistive personnel [UAP], and contract)
0205 - Nursing Hours per Patient Day
0206 - Practice Environment Scale - Nursing Work Index (PES-NWI) (composite and five subscales)
0207 - Voluntary Turnover
0347 - Death Rate in Low-Mortality Diagnosis Related Groups (PSI 2) (updated)
0504 - Pediatric Weight Documented in Kilograms
1716 - National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Facility-wide Inpatient Hospital-onset Methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MRSA) Bacteremia Outcome Measure
1717 - National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN) Facility-wide Inpatient Hospital-onset Clostridium difficile Infection (CDI) Outcome Measure
The Patient Safety Complications Endorsement Maintenance (Phase Two) Steering Committee will meet on June 14-15, 2012. The meeting is open to NQF members and the public. It will be held at the National Quality Forum, 1030 15th Street, NW, Ninth Floor Conference Center, Suite 950 West, Washington, DC. Space is limited.
We respectfully request that you register so that we can adequately anticipate the number of seats that will be needed. An agenda will be posted prior to the meeting.
Agenda and Dial-in Information (PDF)
Register Now
Project staff hosted a voting webinar on Friday, April 20th from 10:00 – 11:00am with a member of CSAC and a co-chair from the committee. Members and the public had another opportunity to voice their opinions about the draft report and ask the Committee co-chair questions.
Dial-in Information and Agenda (PDF)
CSAC recommended all 14 of the measures for endorsement.
Review the CSAC meetings.
CSAC recommended the two additional measures from the addendum report for endorsement.
Review the CSAC meetings.
Appeals closed on July 18, 2012.
No appeals were filed during this time.
No appeals were filed at this time.
No appeals were filed at this time.