Recent risk adjustment alterations may confuse agencies comparing old and new reports.
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services has refined the risk-adjustment model for outcome-based quality improvement outcome reports, which contain 41 patient outcomes. National reference values for all outcomes in both the risk-adjusted and descriptive reports, the number of cases in the national reference sample at the top of both reports and the number of eligible cases for each outcome changed after April 11.
CMS also put in place a new risk-adjustment model in early March, so "national reference values on risk-adjusted reports requested before and after March 8 will not necessarily match," CMS advises on its OASIS Web site ().
Another item that might alter numbers is a monthly program "that incorporates late submissions, corrections and inactivations in the OBQM/I calculations," CMS explains.
CMS isn't the only one furnishing quality information on providers. The Joint Commission on the Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations also will begin issuing its own quality reports in 2004. They will outline a provider's accreditation information and compliance with JCAHO's national patient safety goals. The new reports, which will be available online and on paper, will replace organization-specific performance reports first published almost nine years ago, the accrediting body says.
The Wound, Ostomy, and Continence Nurses Society (WOCN) recently announced that their "Guideline for the Management of Patients with Lower-Extremity Arterial Disease" was accepted by the National Guideline Clearinghouse. The newly accepted guideline for management of arterial wounds of the lower extremity provides guidance for assessment, interventions and citations to support the recommendations. It is available at .