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Clinical Audit 2010
Identification of a reliable subset of process indicators for clinical audit in stroke care: an example from AustraliaDOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CA.S7094 Keywords: stroke, processes of care, performance, acute care, Australia Abstract: entification of a reliable subset of process indicators for clinical audit in stroke care: an example from Australia Methodology (3537) Total Article Views Authors: Dominique A Cadilhac, Monique Kilkenny, Leonid Churilov, et al Published Date July 2010 Volume 2010:2 Pages 67 - 77 DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.2147/CA.S7094 Dominique A Cadilhac1,2, Monique Kilkenny1,2, Leonid Churilov1,2, Dawn Harris3, Erin Lalor3, on behalf of the National Stroke Foundation 1National Stroke Research Institute, Heidelberg Heights 3081, Vic, Australia; 2Department of Medicine, The University of Melbourne 3010, Australia; 3National Stroke Foundation, Melbourne 3000, Australia Abstract: In 2007, the National Stroke Foundation (Australia) conducted the first national audit of acute inpatient services for stroke with >30 indicators. Routine collection of many variables can be a burden for clinicians, and methods to identify practical subsets are needed. Purpose: To identify a subset of indicators to facilitate meaningful longitudinal comparisons, and to reliably represent the full suite of indicators. Methods: 3-steps were taken: 1) Value-based judgments to establish a subset were made by the National Advisory Committee (of the National Stroke Foundation) given: level of evidence, clinical relevance, consumer importance, and ability for international comparisons 2) Statistical analyses were used to identify subsets that could predict patient outcome and total process score 3) Comparisons of steps 1 and 2: logistic regression and estimation of agreement using intraclass correlation coefficient and Lin’s concordance coefficient. Results: Value-based judgments resulted in 14 indicators being selected; parametric methods identified 12. Six indicators were consistently selected: stroke unit care; aspirin, physiotherapy assessment, and speech pathology assessment within 48 hours; a care plan; and -antihypertensive medication at discharge. The scoring method based on the value-based indicator subset -demonstrated excellent agreement with total process scores of hospitals. Conclusion: Selection of an indicator subset requires consideration of several factors. -Indicators selected by experts were robust.
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