1.Severity Measurement Methods and Comparing Hospital Death Rates for Coronary Artery Bypass Graft Surgery.
Youngdae KWON ; Hyungsik AHN ; Youngsoo SHIN
Korean Journal of Preventive Medicine 2001;34(3):244-252
OBJECTIVE: Health insurers and policy makers are increasingly examining the hospital mortality rate as an indicator of hospital quality and performance. To be meaningful, a risk-adjustment of the death rates must be implemented. This study reviewed 5 severity measurement methods and applied them to the same data set to determine whether judgments regarding the severity-adjusted hospital mortality rates were sensitive to the specific severity measure. METHODS: The medical records of 584 patients who underwent coronary artery bypass graft surgery in 6 general hospitals during 1996 and 1997 were reviewed by trained nurses. The MedisGroups, Disease Staging, Computerized Severity Index, APACHElll and KDRG were used to quantify severity of the patients. The predictive probability of death was calculated for each patient in the sample from a multivariate logistic regression model including the severity score, age and sex to evaluate the hospitals' performance, the ratio of the observed number of deaths to the expected number for each hospital was calculated. RESULTS: The overall in-hospital mortality rate was 7.0%, ranging from 2.7% to 15.7% depending on the particular hospital. After the severity adjustment, the mortality rates for each hospital showed little difference according to the severity measure. The 5 severity measurement methods varied in their statistical performance. All had a higher c statistic and R2 than the model containing only age and sex. There was a little difference in the relative hospital performance evaluation by the severity measure. CONCLUSION: These results suggest that judgments regarding a hospital's performance based on severity adjusted mortality can be sensitive to the severity measurement method. Although the 5 severity measures regarding hospital performance concurred, more often than would be expected by chance, the assessment of an individual hospital mortality rates varied by the different severity measurement method used.
Administrative Personnel
;
Coronary Artery Bypass*
;
Coronary Vessels*
;
Dataset
;
Hospital Mortality
;
Hospitals, General
;
Humans
;
Insurance Carriers
;
Judgment
;
Logistic Models
;
Medical Records
;
Mortality*
;
Risk Adjustment
;
Severity of Illness Index
;
Transplants
2.Two cases of occupational asthma induced by 7-ACA and ACT.
KwangSik OH ; TaeWon LEE ; KangHyun CHOI ; HyungSik SHIN ; Mi Kyeong KIM
Journal of Asthma, Allergy and Clinical Immunology 2003;23(3):534-538
7-ACA(7-aminocephalosporanic acid) and ACT(aminocephalosporanic thiazine) are basic materials for development of 2nd and 3rd generation cephalosporin. Occupational asthmas(OA) induced by these materials have been very rarely reported. We had experienced 2 cases of OA by them. One was 26 year-old male laboratorian involving 7ACA manufacturing directly. The other case was 40 year-old male asthmatics working at the ware house keeping 7ACA and ACT, not directly making these. The result of skin prick test with 55 common inhalant allergens and 7ACA, ACT and several cephalosporins including Cefazolin, Cefuroxime, Ceftazidime, Cefotaxime, Ceftriaxone and Cefotetan. First case revealed positive reactions to 7ACA and Ceftriaxone, but second case, only positive to ACT. In first case, bronchial challenge with 7ACA only showed positive, but in second, those with 7ACA and ACT both showed positive, though negative to 7ACA in skin test.
Adult
;
Allergens
;
Asthma, Occupational*
;
Cefazolin
;
Cefotaxime
;
Cefotetan
;
Ceftazidime
;
Ceftriaxone
;
Cefuroxime
;
Cephalosporins
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Skin
;
Skin Tests