‘A’ for South Coast Medical
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Mike Swanson
PacifiCare’s first Quality Index profile of more than 200 state
hospitals awarded South Coast Medical Center an overall A grade, but
the good news is dampened somewhat because the report isn’t endorsed
by the California Healthcare Assn.
The profile, released early this month, evaluates hospitals in its
system using 55 measures designed to pinpoint flaws and strengths
that help patients and doctors determine which facilities best suit
their needs.
“More transparency is needed in hospitals as health care costs
keep going up,” said Tyler Mason, vice president of public relations
for PacifiCare Health Systems. “Especially in Orange County, where
patients have so many options for health care, they deserve to know
as much as possible about the hospitals they have to choose from.”
A press release issued by the California Healthcare Assn. calls
the profile “a good example of a well-intentioned but disjointed
effort at measuring quality of care.
“PacifiCare has translated complex data from multiple sources into
percentile rankings -- and then letter grades. This approach doesn’t
employ the rigors of a statistically derived analysis.”
The Healthcare Assn. also notes that a variety of hospital report
cards are available on the Web, but none are nationally accepted.
South Coast Medical Center’s Director of Marketing Maggie Baumann
said that while the hospital adamantly backs the California
Healthcare Assn.’s opinions, a good report card is difficult to frown
upon.
“It serves as an example of the care we’ve been taking for a long
time now,” she said. “It’s like when you’re taking a class and doing
your homework every night, you get rewarded when the test comes. We
were very pleased with the results.”
With A’s in overall quality, appropriate care and patient
satisfaction, along with B’s in patient safety and utilization, the
hospital scored one of the highest grade point averages in Orange
County, at 3.6.
The California Healthcare Assn. and its regional associations
support an initiative led by the American Hospital Assn. to establish
“national quality standards on which all hospitals can be measured.”
In the meantime, however, PacifiCare’s Quality Index profile is an
easy-to-read, broad gauge of local hospitals that’s available to the
public now. A PacifiCare press release recognizes its relatively
cursory approach with confidence.
“Measuring hospitals on only four to 10 indicators does not give
consumers enough information on total hospital performance,” it says.
“Instead, we chose to measure the most common conditions and
procedures impacting patients.”
The profile grades areas including: “appropriate care,” which
measures the avoidance of hospital-based complications not directly
related to the primary reason for admission; “patient safety,” which
measures the hospitals’ mortality rates; “patient satisfaction,”
which measures arrive time through patient surveys; and
“utilization,” which measures how well hospitals minimized a
patient’s stay.
While the media hasn’t appeared interested in the profile, Mason
said, investors and members have expressed early approval.
“When we released [the profile] on medical groups like Bristol
Park, the media was all over it, and investors and members were
pretty quiet,” Mason said. “Now it’s the opposite. It’s getting out
there, but there’s a lot going on right now both in California and
overseas that probably isn’t helping its publicity.”
The Quality Index profile is available to the public online at
www.pacificare.com, and copies can be requested through PacifiCare’s
customer service department by calling (800) 624-8822.
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