Abstract
OBJECTIVE:
To determine whether publicly reporting hospital scores on antibiotic timing in pneumonia(percentage of patients with pneumonia receiving antibiotics within 4 hours) has led to unintended adverseconsequences for patients.
STUDY DESIGN:
Retrospective analyses of 13,042 emergency department (ED) visits by adult patients with respiratory symptoms in the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey, 2001-2005.
METHODS:
Rates of pneumonia diagnosis, antibiotic use, and waiting times to see a physician were compared before and after public reporting, using a nationally representative hospital sample. These outcomes also were compared between hospitals with different antibiotic timing scores.
RESULTS:
There were no differences in rates of pneumonia diagnosis (10% vs 11% of all ED visits, P = .72) orantibiotic administration (34% vs 35%, P = .21) before and after antibiotic timing score reporting. Mean waiting times to be seen by a physician increased similarly for patients with and without respiratory symptoms (11-minute vs 6-minute increase, respectively; P = .29). After adjustment for confounders, hospitals with higher 2005antibiotic timing scores had shorter mean waiting times for all patients, but there were no significant score-related trends for rates of pneumonia diagnosis or antibiotic use.
CONCLUSION:
Despite concerns, public reporting of hospital antibiotic timing scores has not led to increasedpneumonia diagnosis, antibiotic use, or a change in patient prioritization.
PMCID: PMC2746403
American Journal of Managed Care
2009
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/?term=Reporting%20hospitals%E2%80%99%20antibiotic%20timing%20in%20pneumonia%3A%20adverse%20consequences%20for%20patients%3F