Quality down at hospitals that focus on care for poor
Patient Safety Monitor Alert
May 21, 2008
The quality of care provided for patients at hospitals that typically care for the poor, sometimes called safety-net hospitals, is lacking, reports The Washington Post. These hospitals are funded through state and federal programs and often enter into a low-quality cycle. The worse quality these facilities offer to patients, the less money they receive from federal programs that are structured on a pay-for-performance plan. The data supporting this finding was published in the May 14 Journal of the American Medical Association. The data was taken from 3,665 hospitals—safety-net and nonsafety-net—from 2004 to 2006.
According to the report, those hospitals with a higher percentage of Medicare patients were less likely to be included in a list of top-performing hospitals by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services; those hospitals that treated lower numbers of Medicare patients were more likely to be included in the top performer ranks.
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