| 17 Juillet 2013
A  new study reveals significant hospital-to-hospital variability in  patient death rates following emergency surgical admissions in England.  Published early online in the BJS (British Journal of Surgery),  the study also found that survival rates were higher in hospitals with better resources. 
Patients presenting as emergencies account for the majority of deaths associated with general surgery. There is increasing evidence that the quality of care for these high-risk patients is variable across hospitals within England’s National Health Service, which is the country’s publicly funded healthcare system. Such variability in care is likely to be reflected in differences in mortality rates among hospitals.
 To  investigate, Omar Faiz, Consultant Colorectal Surgeon and Honorary  Senior Lecturer, St. Mark's Hospital and Imperial College London, and  his  colleagues conducted a national study to quantify and explore  variability in death rates among high-risk emergency general surgery  patients. Their analysis  included 367,796 patients who received care at 145 hospitals from 2000  to 2009.  The  researchers found significant variability in death rates within 30 days  of admission among patients treated at different hospitals, with  rates ranging from 9.2 percent to 18.2 percent. This variability in  mortality may in part be explained by differences in hospital resources.  Specifically,  hospitals that had greater numbers of intensive care beds and made  greater use of ultrasound and computed tomography scanning tended to  have lower mortality  rates.  “We  do not yet fully understand all the reasons for variable performance,  but this study strongly suggests that there is considerable scope  for improving the care of emergency surgical patients,” said Faiz. “The  findings may have long term implications with regard to the provision of  emergency  services and the infrastructure required to support high-risk emergency  patients in acute general hospitals.” 









