Failure-to-Rescue in Thoracic Surgery

Thorac Surg Clin. 2017 Aug;27(3):257-266. doi: 10.1016/j.thorsurg.2017.03.005. Epub 2017 May 22.

Abstract

Variability in outcomes not attributable to case mix or chance is an indicator of low-quality care. Failure-to-rescue is an outcome measure defined as death during a hospitalization among patients who experience a complication. Researchers have used this measure to better understand the determinants of an untimely death-preventing complications, rescue, or both. Studies repeatedly find that complication rates vary little, if at all, across hospitals ranked by risk-adjusted mortality rates, suggesting that hospitals are equally capable (or incapable) of preventing complications. In contrast, variation in failure-to-rescue rates seems to explain much of the variation in risk-adjusted hospital-level mortality rates. These findings suggest that system-level interventions that allow for the early detection and treatment of complications (ie, rescue) may reduce variability in hospital-level outcomes and improve the quality of thoracic surgical care.

Keywords: Failure-to-rescue; Quality improvement; Thoracic surgery.

Publication types

  • Review

MeSH terms

  • Failure to Rescue, Health Care*
  • Humans
  • Thoracic Surgical Procedures*