Originally published May 29, 2008 at 12:00 AM | Page modified May 29, 2008 at 1:32 PM
Too much medical treatment? Hospital rankings vary in study of aggressiveness
More aggressive care in hospitals can result in increased risk of infections, medical errors and uncoordinated care, says a new analysis by Consumer Reports. Seattle-area hospitals ranked as much less aggressive than hospitals overall in cities such as Los Angeles or New York, but there was still wide variation among them. And that should lead patients to ask lots of questions, says Consumer Reports, because too much medical care may actually shorten lives.
Seattle Times health reporter
Information
Consumer Reports hospital comparison Web tool: www.ConsumerReportsHealth.org
When it comes to hospital health care, more isn't necessarily better, says a Consumer Reports analysis of care given at hospitals around the country.
More aggressive care can result in increased risk of infection, medical errors and uncoordinated care, says the report says, headlined: "Too much treatment? Aggressive medical care can lead to more pain, with no gain."
In the Seattle area, hospitals treated patients much less aggressively than did hospitals in some other large cities, such as Los Angeles or New York. But the report still showed large variation here in the care received from hospital to hospital.
The report published today relies on data from a 2008 Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care study of seriously ill Medicare patients at nearly 3,000 hospitals from 2001 through 2005, as well as earlier studies. Scores reflect days in the hospital and visits from specialists, while earlier research looked at surgeries, procedures and tests.
Patients were all 65 or older, and were treated for the top nine leading causes of death, including congestive heart failure, chronic pulmonary disease, cancer, dementia, coronary artery disease, chronic kidney failure, peripheral vascular disease, diabetes with organ damage, and severe chronic liver disease.
In Los Angeles, 20 hospitals scored in the 97th percentile or above, and the "most conservative" hospital was in the 72nd percentile.
By contrast, Puget Sound-area hospitals varied from the 2nd percentile of aggressiveness to the 44th.
Still, that variation among hospitals ought to concern patients, says Dr. John Santa, director of the Consumer Reports Health Ratings Center, because while a specific patient might benefit from aggressive treatment, "on average, aggressive hospitals do not have better outcomes, and may be worse."
Scores aren't a "rating," says Santa, but a ranking. "We would not want to say that an aggressive hospital is a bad or good hospital, or a conservative hospital is a good or bad hospital at this point."
However, he noted, some hospitals with the best reputations don't necessarily do more.
The most aggressive hospitals in the United States were in New York, Los Angeles and Miami, and included NYU Langone Medical Center in New York City, Alhambra Hospital Medical Center and Pacific Alliance Medical Center in Los Angeles, and Westchester General Hospital and Mt. Sinai Medical Center in Miami, the report said.
In the last two years of life, patients 65 or older saw a doctor an average of 109 times in Los Angeles, 88 times in Manhattan, and 45 times in Seattle.
More complex diseases mean more aggressive care
In the Seattle area, Swedish Medical Center's hospitals (which include First Hill, Cherry Hill and Ballard) ranked as the most aggressive — in the 44th to 40th percentiles.
Swedish's director of clinical effectiveness, Jennifer Harville, said patients with more complex diseases are more likely to end up at Swedish because they can have access there to a broad array of specialty services.
For example, patients with vascular disease often have diabetes, issues with their kidneys and compromised immune systems that make them more susceptible to infections when they're receiving services at a hospital, she said.
Cassie Sauer, spokeswoman for the Washington State Hospital Association, said outlying, smaller hospitals, which more often ranked on the "conservative" side, frequently refer out patients with serious chronic conditions. "Swedish is a place where a lot of people get sent for referral for very serious cancers, very invasive brain tumors, major heart disease ... so it's understandable that you would get more services if that's the disease you show up with instead of appendicitis."
Santa said the data show there are aggressive rural hospitals and conservative big-city hospitals. While the Dartmouth data was adjusted for age, gender and degree of illness, among other things, the adjustment may not be entirely perfect, he said.
"The question ... may be one we need to look at more carefully," he added.
Rankings can help patients ask the right questions
The ranking published today is a "first step," Consumer Reports' Santa said, aimed at translating complex statistical models into consumer-friendly information to help mobilize patients to ask more questions.
Santa hopes the rankings will help patients realize that hospitals vary in degree of aggressiveness about recommending tests, surgeries, procedures or specialty care, and that they should take appropriate steps, including asking lots of questions.
"Patients should be aware whether they're in a conservative or an aggressive hospital, and they should have a lower threshold for asking their doctors questions if the style of care they want doesn't match where they are," Santa said. For example, if they realize they're in a more aggressive hospital, they should ask questions about how their care is being coordinated.
"We always want people to ask those questions," said Sauer at the hospital association. "I think patients should always ask: Is this treatment truly necessary? What are my chances, and what is the pain trade-off?"
Other questions, she said, might include: "Why are you giving me that drug? Is my care being coordinated? Are you sure this is the right thing to do? Are the potential outcomes worth the risk and the money? What am I going to feel like?"
Scores from New York and Los Angeles, she said, made her wonder "are people just spending their last months getting test after test and procedure after procedure that potentially have no effect on their outcomes or make their lives more miserable?"
Carol M. Ostrom: 206-464-2249 or costrom@seattletimes.com
| How area hospitals compare | ||
| A recent report by Consumer Reports, using data from the Dartmouth Atlas Project, indicates that aggressive hospital care doesn't necessarily prolong life — and in fact can shorten it. Care that is overly aggressive can result in conflicting treatments from different doctors or expose patients to more hospital-based infections and hospital errors, among other things. Hospitals were graded on a curve: A 100 percentile ranking would be the most aggressive; a rank of 0 percentile would be least. | ||
| Hospital | City | Percentile |
| Auburn Regional Medical Center | Auburn | 20 |
| Evergreen Healthcare | Kirkland | 8 |
| Grays Harbor Community Hospital | Aberdeen | 5 |
| Harborview Medical Center | Seattle | 10 |
| Harrison Medical Center | Bremerton | 11 |
| Highline Medical Center | Burien | 21 |
| Jefferson Healthcare | Port Townsend | 2 |
| Northwest Hospital | Seattle | 21 |
| Olympic Medical Center | Port Angeles | 3 |
| Overlake Hospital Medical Center | Bellevue | 13 |
| St. Francis Hospital | Federal Way | 3 |
| St. Joseph Hospital | Bellingham | 3 |
| Stevens Healthcare | Edmonds | 22 |
| Swedish Health Services, First Hill and Ballard campuses | Seattle | 44 |
| Swedish Medical Center, Cherry Hill | Seattle | 40 |
| UW Medical Center | Seattle | 33 |
| Valley Medical Center | Renton | 9 |
| Virginia Mason Medical Center | Seattle | 29 |
| Consumer Reports | ||
Copyright © 2008 The Seattle Times Company
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