Monitoring of rates of surgical site infection, as well as reporting of those rates to the public, vary dramatically from state to state, according to a study published online March 2 in the Journal for Healthcare Quality.
Monitoring and publicly reporting data on surgical site infections (SSIs) has been demonstrated to markedly improve patient outcomes, and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services recently announced that hospitals must report such data (for certain procedures) and meet benchmarks to avoid financial penalties. Yet currently there is no standardized system for collecting or reporting SSI data, with each state addressing the issue through its own individual laws, regulations, or "plans," said Dr. Martin A. Makary, a laparoscopic and pancreatic surgeon at Johns Hopkins University, Baltimore, and his associates.
"It is critical to standardize the reporting process before SSIs are incorporated into the Medicare payment scheme," they noted.
Dr. Makary and his colleagues reviewed the legislation on SSI monitoring and reporting for all 50 states and the District of Columbia, then assessed each state’s actual reporting of such data for a single month – September 2010.
They found that only 21 states mandate the monitoring of SSI rates and only 20 require public reporting; the remaining states had no such laws. And despite these legal mandates, only 8 of the 21 states had SSI data available in an easily accessible manner.
These states were South Carolina, Missouri, Colorado, Massachusetts, New York, Ohio, Vermont, and Oregon.
Among these eight states, SSI reporting still varied widely, with each state tracking different procedures. Seven states reported on CABG, six on hip or knee replacements, four on hysterectomies, and two each on colon surgeries or herniorrphaphies. One state reported on breast surgeries, one on gallbladder procedures, one on cesarean sections, and one on spinal fusions.
"Interestingly, colon surgery, which has the highest rate of SSIs nationally, was only reported by two states. And gallbladder surgery, which is among the most common surgical procedures ... was only reported by one state," the investigators said (J. Healthc. Qual. 2012 March 2 [doi: 10.1111/j.1945-1474.2011.00176.x]).
The data collection itself varied greatly by state. For example, some states monitored only in-hospital SSIs for colorectal surgery, while others monitored 30-day SSIs for the same procedure. This resulted in a nearly 40% discrepancy in colorectal SSIs between these states, since many of these infections don’t develop until after hospital discharge, the researchers said.
The lag time between collection of the information and its publication tended to be long, with some states failing to post their SSI data until 11 months after it was obtained.
"Without the same quality and type of data, it is difficult for consumers, payers, or regulators to compare infections within or across states, potentially making inaccurate inferences about the quality of care," Dr. Makary and his associates said.
"Our study highlights the need for the federal government to set the rules for how hospitals define, monitor, and report SSIs," they added.
No conflicts of interest were reported.