Thursday, 3 April 2014

A debate around how hospitals use data is needed

A debate around how hospitals use data is needed Reliability of information about standards of NHS care has been called into question after accusations of 'fiddling' death rates

A report this week from Dr Foster highlighted the dramatic rise in the number of patients recorded as being in hospital for palliative care over recent years. The report pointed out that these shifts had an impact on the reliability of mortality measurement since patients who come into hospital for palliative care are expected to die unlike those brought in for treatment. The point of the report was to draw attention to the fact that, because of the rules about coding of hospital data, patients admitted for treatment who die in hospital can be recorded in the same way as patients admitted for palliative care.

This is a problem because it affects the reliability of the information we have about the standards of care in the NHS. If the data we use to judge where services are working and where they are not gets corrupted, we need to fix it. How we do that should be the focus of any debate on the issue. The Guardian

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