NQF is seeking to endorse cross-cutting patient safety measures that span conditions, populations, and settings of care. Read more

Description

The Opportunity

Medical errors and unsafe care kill tens of thousands of Americans each year. NQF’s National Voluntary Consensus Standards for the Reporting of Healthcare-Associated Infection Data reports that “an estimated 2 million HAIs alone occur each year in the United States, accounting for an estimated 90,000 deaths and adding $4.5 billion to $5.7 billion in healthcare costs.”

The Institute of Medicine report Preventing Medication Errors identifies error rates across a variety of settings and types, estimating that about 400,000 preventable adverse drug events (ADEs) occur each year in U.S. hospitals; another 800,000 in long-term care, and more than 500,000 among Medicare patients in outpatient settings. The report also notes that costs associated with preventable medication errors have not been well researched but conservatively estimates that the annual cost to hospitals of the 400,000 ADEs, in 2006 dollars, was $3.5 billion.

HAIs and preventable medication errors, while occurring in relatively high numbers, are only two of the many types of patient safety-related events that occur in healthcare settings. The costs are passed on in a number of ways—premiums, taxes, lost work time and wages, and health threats, to name a few. Proactively addressing medical errors and unsafe care will protect patients from harm and lead to more affordable, effective, and equitable care.

NQF has a ten-year history of focusing on patient safety. Through various projects, NQF has previously endorsed over 100 consensus standards related to patient safety. In addition, NQF endorsed 34 safe practices in the 2010 update of the Safe Practices for Better Healthcare and 29 Serious Reportable Events (SRE). The Safe Practices, SREs, and NQF-endorsed patient safety measures are important tools for tracking and improving patient safety performance in American healthcare. However, significant gaps remain in the measurement of patient safety. There is also a recognized need to expand available patient safety measures beyond the hospital setting and harmonize safety measures across sites and settings of care. In order to develop a more robust set of safety measures, NQF will be soliciting patient safety measures to address environment-specific issues with highest potential leverage for improvement.

About the Project

This project will evaluate measures related to patient safety that can be used for accountability and public reporting for all populations and in all settings of care. This project will address topic areas including but not limited to:

  • Measures from applicable settings, such as skilled nursing facilities and inpatient rehabilitation facilities
  • Unplanned admission-related measures from other settings (i.e., hospitalization for patients on dialysis)
  • All-Cause and condition specific admission measures
  • Condition-specific readmissions measures
  • Measures examining length of stay

The Patient Safety project will also review 19 measures that are eligible for maintenance, including measures targeting healthcare-associated infections, medication safety, and imaging safety.

NQF Process

Candidate consensus will be considered for NQF endorsement as national voluntary consensus standards. Consensus on the recommendations will be developed through NQF’s formal Consensus Development Process (CDP, Version 1.9). This project involves the active participation of representatives from across the spectrum of healthcare stakeholders and will be guided by a Standing Committee.

Funding

This project is funded under NQF’s contract with the Department of Health and Human Services, Consensus-based Entities Regarding Healthcare Performance Measurement.

Related NQF Work 

Contact Information

For further information, contact Andrew Lyzenga, Senior Project Manager or Suzanne C. Theberge, MPH, Project Manager, at 202-783-1300 or via email at patientsafety@qualityforum.org.

NQF is seeking to endorse cross-cutting patient safety measures that span conditions, populations, and settings of care. Read more

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Explore NQF’s new virtual space and learn about current and planned measure development activities.

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