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    Intensive Care Med. 2003 Dec;29(12):2223-9. Epub 2003 Oct 8.

    Using hierarchical modeling to measure ICU quality.

    Source

    University of Rochester, School of Medicine and Dentistry, 601 Elmwood Avenue, Rochester, NY 14642, USA. Laurent_Glance@urmc.rochester.edu

    Abstract

    OBJECTIVE:

    To determine whether hierarchical modeling agrees with conventional logistic regression modeling on the identity of ICU quality outliers within a large multi-institutional database.

    DESIGN:

    Retrospective database analysis.

    SETTING AND PATIENTS:

    Subset of the Project IMPACT database consisting of 40435 adult patients admitted to surgical, medical, and mixed surgical-medical ICUs ( n=55) between 1997 and 1999 who met inclusion criteria for SAPS II.

    MEASUREMENTS AND RESULTS:

    The SAPS II score was customized to this database using conventional logistic regression and using a hierarchical (random coefficients) model. Both models exhibited excellent discrimination ( Cstatistic) and calibration (Hosmer-Lemeshow statistic). The hierarchical and nonhierarchical models had C statistics of.870 and.865, and HL statistics of 3.71 ( p>.88, df=8) and 8.94 ( p>.35, df=8), respectively. Since the random effects component of the hierarchical model accounts for between-hospital variability, only the fixed-effects coefficients were used to calculate the expected mortality rate based on the hierarchical model. The ratio and 95% confidence intervals of the observed to expected mortality rate were calculated using both models for each ICU. ICUs whose observed/expected ratio was either less than 1 or greater than 1, and whose 95% confidence interval did not include 1 were labeled as either high-performance or low-performance outliers, respectively. Analysis using kappa statistic revealed almost perfect agreement between the two models (nonhierarchical vs. hierarchical) on the identity of ICU quality outliers.

    CONCLUSIONS:

    Models obtained by customizing SAPS II using a nonhierarchical and a hierarchical approach exhibit excellent agreement on the identity of ICU quality outliers.

    PMID:
    14534777
    [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]

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