Showing posts with label rankings. Show all posts
Showing posts with label rankings. Show all posts

Thursday, 9 June 2016

Princess Health and Nonprofit says most of the 52 Kentucky hospitals it grades on patient safety got Bs and Cs, and KentuckyOne got five Ds. Princessiccia

Kentucky Health News

A nonprofit group that rates hospitals recently doled out its hospital safety scores and found that most Kentucky hospitals scored a 'B' or 'C' in overall patient safety, and that five of the six Kentucky hospitals that got Ds are owned by the same hospital system.

The Leapfrog Group, a non-profit organization that rates hospitals, evaluated more than 2,500 hospitals nationwide, including 52 in Kentucky. Most of Kentucky's hospitals were not rated because rural critical-access hospitals don�t have to report their quality measures.

It found that 21.2 percent (11) of Kentucky's hospitals got As, which was much lower than the national average of 31 percent, while 11.5 percent (6) got Ds, more than the national average of 6.3 percent. Additionally, 23 percent (12) got Bs and 44 percent (23) got Cs.

"Once again Kentucky had fewer 'A'-rated hospitals than the national median and more hospitals rated near the bottom with increasing numbers of 'D's. More troublesome is the observation that five of the six hospitals receiving a 'D' are in the same hospital system," Dr. Peter Hasselbacher, emeritus professor of medicine at the University of Louisville, wrote in an op-ed for the Kentucky Health Policy Institute blog.

Except Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital, the Kentucky hospitals that got a D are owned or operated by KentuckyOne Health: Jewish Hospital, Sts. Mary and Elizabeth Hospital and University Hospital in Louisville; and St. Joseph Hospital and St. Joseph East in Lexington.

Richardson
Staffing cuts at the U of L Hospital have made it �unsafe� for seriously ill and injured patients, Dr. J. David Richardson, vice chair of surgery and president of the American College of Surgeons, told the university's top health officials in an email on June 7. He said the public hospital has �never been worse in the 34 years that I have been heavily involved with it,� reports Andrew Wolfson of The Courier-Journal.

"In an interview, Richardson said the problems are so great that the only solution is to 'unwind' the 2013 agreement in which the state turned over day-to-day management of the hospital to Catholic Health Initiatives," Wolfson reports. He said the letter understated the problems, which are making it impossible to conduct academic research at the hospital.

The two University of Kentucky hospitals got Cs from The Leapfrog Report. Pikeville Medical Center is the only Kentucky hospital evaluated that has had straight As since 2013, when the study began. Click here for Kentucky's Hospital Safety Scores.

KentuckyOne Health issued a statement saying University "is an excellent hospital with a dedicated and talented team of professionals that is staffed to meet the patient�s needs. Our focus has always been on quality, safety and patient experience."

On Sunday, June 12, KentuckyOne and the university ran a full-page ad in The Courier-Journal saying they are "committed to ensuring safe and effective patient care" and "Safety and quality are our top priorities." They said they take Richardson's concerns "seriously, and we are committed to reviewing and addressing the issues noted."

In 2012, when management of most of the hospital was given to KentuckyOne, "Officials said it would pump $1.4 billion into U of L health operations over 20 years. But the company has had financial troubles ever since, and in February 2014 announced it was laying off 500 employees in Kentucky," Wolfson notes.

The Leapfrog Group's analysis was developed under the guidance of the nation's leading patient safety experts and the scores were based on 30 measures of publicly available hospital safety data. The ratings are issued twice a year, for errors, injuries, accidents and infections. The report is peer-reviewed and published in the Journal of Patient Safety.

Hasselbacher noted legislation in Congress that would protect some hospitals from Medicare payment cuts if they serve more than average numbers of indigent and poor people.

"Care must be taken that this initiative, lobbied heavily by hospital organizations and their partners in academic medicine, is not interpreted to imply that is it acceptable to provide medical care of lower quality to poor people or in teaching hospitals," he wrote. "The fact that this protection is being considered at all is a tacit admission that our current methods of measuring quality and safety are flawed."

Kentucky Health News is an independent news service of the Institute for Rural Journalism and Community Issues, based in the School of Journalism and Media at the University of Kentucky, with support from the Foundation for a Healthy Kentucky.

Thursday, 17 March 2016

Princess Health and Annual County Health Rankings for Kentucky show many shifts in the middle echelons, not much at the top and bottom. Princessiccia

By Melissa Patrick
Kentucky Health News

The sixth annual County Health Rankings report shows little change in Kentucky's top and bottom rankings, but there were a few surprises, with several counties showing up in the top 10 for the first time.

Marshall County was one, ranking 10th in both health outcomes and health factors, the rankings' two main measures. This is an improvement from last year's 26th in outcomes and 19th in factors. Bullitt County also moved into the top 10 for the first time this year, ranking sixth for outcomes, up from 27th.

Health outcomes include length and quality of life. Health factors contribute to outcomes and include four categories: health-related behaviors, clinical care, social and economic factors, and the county's physical environment. The rankings for each county are relative to other counties in the same state.

"Communities use the rankings to help identify issues and opportunities for local health improvement, as well as to garner support for initiatives among government agencies, healthcare providers, community organizations, business leaders, policy makers, and the public," says the report.

The County Health Rankings are a collaboration between the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation and the University of Wisconsin Population Health Institute.

2016 Health Outcomes - Kentucky
The report is a general categorization of a county's health status. The rankings are arranged in quartiles, or four numerical classes, to de-emphasize the small statistical differences among closely ranked counties. Kentucky has 120 counties, in quartiles of 30.

The bottom quartile comprises almost entirely Appalachian counties, the only exception being Fulton, in the Mississippi Delta at the state's western tip.

Oldham and Boone counties continued to be the top two for health outcomes in the state, as they have been since the rankings began. Spencer County, ranked third, spent the last two years ranked 11th. Shelby and Scott counties are ranked fourth and fifth in outcomes. All are suburban, formerly rural, counties in the state's three major metropolitan areas.

The bottom 10 counties in health outcomes are all rural. They saw little change from last year, with Harlan (117) and Wolfe (119) being the only new additions. The bottom five counties in outcomes are Floyd, Harlan, Perry, Wolfe and Owsley (which has been ranked last for health outcomes every year, except 2013, when it ranked 102nd).

Counties that saw the greatest improvements in health outcomes were Livingston (LG on map), moving up from 70th to 35th; Trimble (TI), moving up from 56th to 27th; and Crittenden (CD), moving up from 64th to 38th. All these counties moved into a higher quartile with these ranking changes.

Morgan County, which for years had health outcomes far better than its health factors, saw the greatest decline in the outcome rankings, moving from 48th to 76th. It was followed by Russell, which fell from 61st to 88th; and Bracken, which dropped from 46th to 72nd. Russell County remained in the same quartile as last year, but the other two counties shifted to a lower one.

2016 Health Factors - Kentucky
The top five counties for health factors have all been in the top 10 before. They include Oldham, Boone, Spencer, Woodford and Campbell counties; Campbell had dropped last year to 12th.

The bottom five counties for health factors are Magoffin, Wolfe, McCreary, Breathitt and Bell, all in the Eastern Kentucky Coalfield.

Counties that saw the greatest improvement in health factors were Clark, moving from 53rd to 29th; Gallatin, going from 89th to 67th; and Crittenden, rising from 86th to 64th. Only Clark, just east of Lexington, moved into a higher quartile.

Counties that saw the greatest declines in health factors were Taylor , dropping from 30th to 58th; Butler, falling from 66th to 94th; and Union, dropping from 46th to 73rd. Each of these counties dropped into a lower quartile. Butler, Fulton and Carroll were the only non-Appalachian counties in the bottom quartile.

The report identifies "meaningful gaps" that exist between the best and worst Kentucky counties and suggests that policymakers look at these gaps as they search for ways to improve the counties' health, including: adult smoking, adult obesity, uninsured rates, preventable hospital stays, education levels, unemployment, children in poverty and income inequality.

The report says, "Every year, over 2,800 deaths in Kentucky could be avoided if all residents in the state had a fair chance to be healthy."

Friday, 29 May 2015

Princess Health and Kentucky's seniors rank 48th in insurance firm's health rankings.Princessiccia

Click here to go to interactive map.
Kentucky seniors ranked in the bottom 10 states for 23 of the 35 measures ranked by the 2015 America's Health Ranking Seniors Report, placing Kentucky in 48th place for the second year in a row.

�The report is a call to action. We believe you can�t improve what you don�t measure,� Dr. Julie Daftari, market medical director for United Health Care of Kentucky told Alyssa Harvey of the Bowling Green Daily News. �It may start with seniors taking individual action. If we live long enough, we�ll be part of these statistics in the future."

Kentucky seniors ranked last in two areas, total health outcomes and preventable hospitalizations; next to last in premature deaths and education and in the bottom three states for smoking, seniors who are considered underweight, and poor mental health days.

The report notes that smoking is the leading cause of preventable death in the U.S. and "older smokers are at an increased risk of smoking-related illness as they tend to be heavy smokers with an average smoking duration of 40 years" and "are less likely than younger smokers to believe that smoking harms their health." Kentucky, with 11.8 percent of its seniors regularly smoking, ranked third highest in senior smoking, behind Nevada and Mississippi.

The report is intended to point out the health challenges facing today's seniors and offer a starting point to help states determine what needs to change. That being said, Kentucky ranks very low in an area that could help improve these outcomes: community support, where it ranks 45th.

The report did say that Kentucky seniors do have some strengths. They have a low prevalence of chronic drinking, low percentage of adults needing pain management, high flu vaccination coverage and a low percentage of low-care nursing home residents.

More Kentucky seniors also reported very good or excellent health since last year's report, up to 33.7 percent from 31.2 percent.

The report noted that a decrease in physical inactivity is a nationwide problem for seniors, with 33.1 percent of seniors nationwide reporting they did not get enough physical activity. This percentage was even higher in Kentucky at 40.2 percent, which is higher than the previous two years (34.5 percent in 2014 and 17 percent in 2013).

The report notes that today, one in seven Americans are aged 65 and older, and in the next two decades the rest of the 77 million baby boomers will move into this demographic. The report also projected the increase in Kentucky's senior population between 2015 to 2030 will be 41.8 percent.

�The fact that we were able to identify key strengths and challenges gives Kentucky an opportunity to address those specific issues,� Daftari told Harvey. �If these challenges aren�t addressed, there may be a significant strain on health care in the future.�

The rankings were based on 35 measures of senior health including behavior determinants like smoking and dental visits; micro and macro community and environmental determinants like poverty and social support; policy issues like percentage of seniors on SNAP; and measures of clinical care like the percentage of seniors who receive home health.; and outcomes like the percentage of seniors who have fallen. It also included measures like education and cognition.

Sunday, 3 May 2015

Princess Health andMost Kentucky hospitals did average or better in new patient satisfaction ratings; seven got top rating and six got bottom rating.Princessiccia

Princess Health andMost Kentucky hospitals did average or better in new patient satisfaction ratings; seven got top rating and six got bottom rating.Princessiccia

Most of the Kentucky hospitals that were rated on a newly released five-star scale for patient satisfaction got three and four stars. Seven of them got a five-star rating and six got a two-star rating, the lowest rating given to any of the Kentucky hospitals that were evaluated.

The star ratings can be found on Medicare's Hospital Compare website and are based on a patient satisfaction survey given to randomly selected patients, not just those on Medicare, at nearly 3,500 Medicare-certified acute care hospitals across the country. The ratings are based on patient admissions between July 2013 and June 2014. Hospitals were not included if they did not have enough surveys completed during that period.

The survey, also known as Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Survey, includes questions about patient satisfaction related to how their doctors, nurses and hospital staff communicated with them, how well their pain was addressed during their hospital stay, how well they were prepared to go home, cleanliness of the hospital and if they would recommend the hospital to others.

Kaiser Health News analyzed the data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services and found that 76 Kentucky hospitals were included in the patient satisfaction star ratings and 17 Kentucky hospitals were not. Kaiser found that the average for all of the rated hospitals in Kentucky was 3.4 stars, one-third, or 25, got four stars; half, or 38, got three.

HealthWatch USA, a non-profit organization that promotes health care transparency and patient advocacy based in Somerset, further analyzed the data and named the hospitals in each state by its star rating.

The seven with five-star ratings are: Clinton County Hospital, Marshall County Hospital, Westlake Regional Hospital, Saint Joseph Martin, Rockcastle County Hospital, Pikeville Medical Center and Russell County Hospital.

The six with two-star ratings are: Georgetown Community Hospital, Harlan ARH Hospital, Hazard ARH Regional Medical Center, Spring View Hospital in Lebanon, University of Louisville Hospital and Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital in Somerset.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services reminds consumers that these patient satisfaction star ratings are just one tool to help decide which hospital to use, and encourages them to use multiple factors to make this decision, including clinical outcomes, their health-care providers opinion and other publicly reported data.

Sunday, 26 April 2015

Princess Health andFederal agency offers a consumer-friendly website that ranks patients' experiences in your local hospitals .Princessiccia

Consumers now have access to a website that ranks 3,500 hospitals around the country on patients' experiences to help them choose a hospital and better understand the quality of care participating hospitals offer, according to a Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services press release.

The 12 star ratings on Hospital Compare are based on 11 of the publicly reported measures from the Hospital Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Survey, and a summary rating for the survey. The survey asks patients questions about nine topics:communication with doctors, communication with nurses, responsiveness of hospital staff, pain management, communication about medicines, discharge information, cleanliness of the hospital environment, quietness of the hospital environment, and transition of care. This survey information is self-reported by patients and will be updated quarterly.

�The patient experience star ratings will make it easier for consumers to use the information on the Hospital Compare website and spotlight excellence in health care quality,� Dr. Patrick Conway, acting principal deputy administrator for the CMS, said in the release.

Consumers already have access to Medicare star systems to rate nursing homes, dialysis centers, private Medicare Advantage insurance plans and certain situations for physicians and group practices, but are they using it?

Not much, according to a recent Kaiser Family Foundation poll. It found that only 31 percent of those polled had seen any information comparing doctors, hospitals, and health insurance plans in the past 12 months. When asked specifically if they had seen information comparing prices or quality across plans and providers, fewer than 1 in 5 people said they had seen such information, and fewer than one in 10 reported using such information.

CMS said the website helps meet goals of the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act, which calls for transparent, easily understood and widely available public reporting. The agency also reminds consumers that the site is just one tool to help them make a decision abut which hospital to use, and encourages them to talk to their health-care providers about hospital quality, and to use "multiple factors" when deciding about a hospital, such as clinical outcomes and other publicly reported data that is on the website.

To see the rankings:
  • Go to the Hospital Compare website
  • Type in your ZIP code, or the name of a particular hospital
  • Click on "Search"
  • Choose three hospitals, by clicking on the "Add to Compare" button
  • Click on "Compare Now," located at the top of the screen
  • Click on "Survey of Patients' Experiences"
  • Scroll down and view star ranking and additional information results
This is a screen shot of the final screen, with a bar of options to click on.

Friday, 30 May 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andLouisville ranks next to last in fitness among 50 largest metros.Princessiccia

Princess Health and Princess Health andLouisville ranks next to last in fitness among 50 largest metros.Princessiccia

The Louisville metropolitan area ranks 49th for fitness among the nation's 50 largest metro areas in the newly released 2014 American Fitness Index, reports Laura Ungar of The Courier-Journal. The ranking is published by the American College of Sports Medicine and is based on 31 indicators of chronic health problems, health behaviors, recreational facilities and physical or built environments.

The Memphis metropolitan area was the only one ranked lower than Louisville. The Louisville metro area includes Jefferson County and eight surrounding counties in Kentucky and four in Indiana.

"There surely is a lot of room for improvement," Dr. Jonathan Becker, a sports medicine specialist at University of Louisville Family Medicine and KentuckyOne Health, told Ungar. "We need to be moving more, eating less and smoking less."

The Washington, D.C., area claimed the top spot as the nation's fittest, rising above Minneapolis-St. Paul, the winner for the last three years.

The negative scores on the index just kept adding up for Louisville, falling way below the targeted fitness index in areas such as smoking, federal aerobic-activity guidelines and the amount of fruits and vegetables consumed per day, Ungar reports. Louisville also had higher levels of disease than the targeted goals for asthma, diabetes and obesity.

"I'm not surprised, based on what I've seen," Patrice Fife, a certified fitness instructor for the Louisville Metro Department of Public Health & Wellness, told Ungar. She said diabetes in the region is "rampant." Overeating is a real problem, and people need to learn more about proper nutrition and portion control, she said: "They need to eat more fresh fruits and vegetables."

City officials and fitness advocates pointed to Louisville's efforts to improve the region's fitness, including programs that bring fresh fruits and vegetables into "food deserts," a ban on smoking ban in public places and expanded smoking-cessation classes. Louisville has also unveiled a plan to curb trans fats in local foods, expand outdoor smoke-free areas and prohibit idling vehicles when air quality is poor, among other things, Ungar notes.

Steve Tarver, chief executive officer of the YMCA of Greater Louisville, told Ungar, "It has taken decades for the Louisville region to become so unhealthy, and it will take a long-term commitment to get healthier. He said it will involve complex issues such as reducing racial and economic health inequities." (Read more)

Sunday, 20 April 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andCEO of Somerset hospital, rated by Consumer Reports as clearly the least safe in Kentucky, is resigning.Princessiccia

Mark Brenzel (Photo via Somerset Commonwealth Journal)
The CEO of the Kentucky hospital with by far the lowest safety rating from Consumer Reports magazine is resigning. Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital is one of 61 owned in 20 states by LifePoint Hospitals of Brentwood, Tenn.

In an April 14 message to the hospital staff, Mark Brenzel wrote, �A few weeks ago, I informed Scott Raplee, President of LifePoint�s Central Group, about my decision to step down  . . . I have struggled managing some health problems since last year that have required me to limit some activities including work hours. While these lifestyle changes have been helpful, they have made it difficult for me to keep up with the demands of this job.�

Brenzel concluded, �I have greatly enjoyed the last four years and am glad to be ending my hospital management career where it began in 1976 when I first visited LCRH [soon after it opened]. We have made great progress in improving patient care and implementing new strategies that will help LCRH be successful in the new healthcare reform environment. My wife and I are planning to stay in the community for the long term and look forward to supporting LCRH in any way that we can.�

Raplee told the Somerset Commonwealth Journal that LifePoint is doing national search to find a replacement for Brenzel, who will remain as CEO during the search. �We are discussing the possibility of Mark taking a new role with LCRH once the new CEO is hired,� Raplee said in a press release.

Monday, 31 March 2014

Princess Health and Princess Health andConsumer Reports rates hospitals on safety, puts Somerset hospital last in Kentucky; hospital blames its incomplete data.Princessiccia

Consumer Reports magazine recently released safety rankings for hospitals across the country, compiled from government data. Miles Memorial Hospital in Damariscotta, Maine, received the best safety rating in the U.S., a 78 on a scale of 100. That was 12 points higher than the hospital labeled Kentucky's safest, Georgetown Community Hospital.

Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital in Somerset received by far the lowest rating in Kentucky, a 20. That was eight points below the next-lowest Kentucky hospital and nine points above Bolivar Medical Center in Cleveland, Miss., which was rated the nation's least safe hospital.

According to a message to the community prepared by Lake Cumberland Regional Hospital officials, "The information used to calculate the Consumer Reports scores does not provide an accurate picture of our hospital's quality and safety performance," because "We learned several years ago that we had not been submitting complete clinical information to Medicare." The hospital employed a clinical documentation improvement program that helped quality scores back into the expected ranges. Because the report featured data from 2009-2012, these improvements were not represented in the results, according to the message. Mark Brenzel, CEO of the hospital, said current information "reflects a much better score for the various quality indicators that they used." The hospital is owned by LifePoint Hospitals of Brentwood, Tenn.

The safety ratings are based on data gathered from the federal Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services. The five categories are occurrences of hospital acquired infections, unnecessary readmissions, mortality, communication about new medications, and appropriate use of scanning. Each categories counts for up to 20 points. Rankings by city, state, and county are available here. Some hospitals have not been rated because they did not have all the valid data measures needed to calculate the score.

"The average score for hospitals is just 51, and 43 hospitals got a score below 30," Consumer Reports said. John Santa, M.D., medical director of Consumer Reports Health, said "It is unacceptable that so many hospitals are doing so poorly. Especially since our ratings show that some hospitals can do a good job at keeping patients safe."

Unfortunately, approximately "440,000 hospital patients a year die at least in part because of preventable medical errors," Consumer Reports said. This figure is based on a comprehensive analysis published in the Journal of Patient Safety, a peer-reviewed medical journal. "What matter is that too many people are dying in hospitals because of medical mistakes, not enough is being done to stop it, and patients need more information," author John James said.

UPDATE, April 4: There are many forms of hospital rankings, some done with questionable business practices such as "licensing fees" they get from hospitals, notes Pia Christensen of the Association of Health Care Journalists.