© 2004 BMJ Publishing Group Ltd & Institute for Healthcare Improvement
COMMENTARY
Readmission as quality indicator
Readmission to hospital: a measure of quality or outcome?
Correspondence to:
Correspondence to:
A Clarke
Institute of Community Health Sciences, Queen Mary, Barts and the London School of Medicine and Dentistry, London E1 4NS; a.e.clarke@qmul.ac.uk
The value of readmission to hospital as a quality indicator is still debatable
Keywords: readmission; quality of care; outcome indicators
| The first 150 words of the full text of this article appear below. |
Readmission to hospital has often been considered as a possible measure of quality of hospital care. Although its measurement is not always easy, the concept is beguilingly simple. An information manager in health services once described it like this: "I take my car into the garage; if it needs to go back in a short time then thats obviously because they didnt do a good enough job!" At the individual level, undoubtedly readmission can represent a failure or breakdown in plans of care for a particular patient, or the occurrence of an unexpected adverse outcomefor example, readmission for wound infection or deep venous thrombosis after surgery. However, as might be expected, health care is almost always more complicated than this.
A number of factors unrelated to the quality of hospital care can affect the likelihood of readmission.1 Patient factors are important, such as the severity, predictability
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