Here’s an interesting thought. Healthcare statistics from 2020 will likely carry an asterisk to help explain why that data may be significantly different from years past and historic trends.
How will COVID-19 affect the hospital infection rates that quality departments regularly track? There are three possibilities:
Let’s use 2019—or, the Before Times—as our baseline to examine how the pandemic may have affected hospital infection rates.
This infographic presents the latest data from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) on six healthcare-associated infections, or HAIs, in acute-care hospitals for 2019. For each HAI, we’re giving you:
As a note of interest, CMS did allow hospitals an exemption for 2019 Q4 HAI data. If facilities were not able to report it to the National Healthcare Safety Network (NHSN), they did not receive a penalty. In the CDC report, they note that the “impact of the ECE policy on the overall 2019 data is negligible as almost all facilities had reported their 2019Q4 data.”
As you can see, everything except ventilator-associated events and surgical site infections was trending in the right direction. The ratio between actual and expected cases for four of the six HAIs dropped in 2019 from 2018, albeit some marginally so. Still, it’s a sign that quality departments, working with infection control and clinicians, were making progress in the year before COVID hit.
What will the numbers show from 2020? What’s your prediction?
Until then, we can help your hospital or health system predict future Hospital Acquired Condition Reduction program performance using AI and predictive modeling to forecast the performance of all U.S. hospitals.
Learn more about our Value Maximizer software platform for HACRP and other CMS quality programs.
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