Important Preface to Consumer Health Information: Florida Hospital supports AHCA's efforts to make data on health care quality more available to the public. The AHCA data only represents one way to measure quality. In the AHCA methodology, Florida Hospital Orlando is shown as having worse than expected mortality rate for Acute Myocardial Infarction (AMI). Yet in other methodologies: MEDai, Premier, CORE and Apache, Florida Hospital has a mortality rate for AMI that is either lower than expected or among the best in the comparison group. What this illustrates is a need for the consumer to be able to look at a variety of accepted measures of quality before any conclusions are made about a provider or their care. Florida Hospital will continue to work with AHCA to insure that the information being shared with the public is meaningful and accurate. Florida Hospital will also continue to share with the public our progress on improving quality. On the face of it, the definition of quality health care seems straightforward enough: “Patients getting the right medicine, treatment or test at the right time, given the patient’s condition.” So why is there such an “alphabet soup” – CMS, AHCA, JCAHO, AHRQ, NCQA, NQF, ASQ, and more1 – of groups working to measure hospital quality? And why do consumers have such a hard time finding and understanding the data? The reality is, health care quality is actually very difficult to measure. In fact, there are so many variables that the groups listed above – and many other experts – have disagreed for years on meaningful comparisons of quality. Florida Hospital Quality Goals
Some experts favor standardized data systems and/or hospital “report cards.” These reports provide many objective measures of the differences in quality of care, but they can be subject to “gaming” that leads to better report card scores but not necessarily better care. Secondly, the “standardized” data isn’t always “apples to apples.” Some data is mandatory, and other data is voluntary. In either case, the formats vary and may include different quality measures. Thirdly, different hospitals use different data systems and have multiple caregivers documenting their processes – not necessarily in the same way. Florida Hospital continues to voluntarily report data on the quality of patient care in conjunction with the National Hospital Quality Initiative supported by CMS, an agency of the US Department of Health and Human Services that runs Medicare. Although we are proud of the level of care and service we provide, we are always working to improve our excellent record of quality patient care. The CMS Hospital Quality Initiative gives us access to resources and hands-on training to support our quality improvement efforts. Current performance improvement initiatives at Florida Hospital include participation in the National Hospital Quality Alliance. It may be helpful to refer to the following as you view the report:
Although the reports show that Florida Hospital compares favorably to other accredited organizations both in the state of Florida and across the country, there is always room for improvement. Complexity aside, the reality is that hospitals must be more open about quality measures and be more “transparent” with their quality data. And consumers must recognize that quality measures are complex and comparisons among hospitals should be viewed cautiously. For more information about Florida Hospital Quality Initiatives, please read our Health Care Quality Briefs or visit the Patient Safety area of our site. For Consumer Health Data, please visit FloridaHealthStat.Com