Hospital-acquired complications: the relative importance of hospital- and patient-related factors

Med J Aust. 2022 Mar 21;216(5):242-247. doi: 10.5694/mja2.51375. Epub 2021 Dec 30.

Abstract

Objective: To quantify the prevalence of hospital-acquired complications; to determine the relative influence of patient- and hospital-related factors on complication rates.

Design, participants: Retrospective analysis of administrative data (Integrated South Australian Activity Collection; Victorian Admitted Episodes Dataset) for multiple-day acute care episodes for adults in public hospitals.

Setting: Thirty-eight major public hospitals in South Australia and Victoria, 2015-2018.

Main outcome measures: Hospital-acquired complication rates, overall and by complication class, by hospital and hospital type (tertiary referral, major metropolitan service, major regional service); variance in rates (intra-class correlation coefficient, ICC) at the patient, hospital, and hospital type levels as surrogate measures of their influence on rates.

Results: Of 1 558 978 public hospital episodes (10 029 918 bed-days), 151 486 included a total of 214 286 hospital-acquired complications (9.72 [95% CI, 9.67-9.77] events per 100 episodes; 2.14 [95% CI, 2.13-2.15] events per 100 bed-days). Complication rates were highest in tertiary referral hospitals (12.7 [95% CI, 12.6-12.8] events per 100 episodes) and for episodes including intensive care components (37.1 [95% CI, 36.7-37.4] events per 100 episodes). For all complication classes, inter-hospital variation was determined more by patient factors (overall ICC, 0.55; 95% CI, 0.53-0.57) than by hospital factors (ICC, 0.04; 95% CI, 0.02-0.07) or hospital type (ICC, 0.01; 95% CI, 0.001-0.03).

Conclusions: Hospital-acquired complications were recorded for 9.7% of hospital episodes, but patient-related factors played a greater role in determining their prevalence than the treating hospital.

Keywords: Adverse events; Analysis of variance; Morbidity; Quality of health care.

MeSH terms

  • Adult
  • Critical Care
  • Hospitalization*
  • Hospitals, Public*
  • Humans
  • Retrospective Studies
  • Victoria / epidemiology