BMJ 1995;310:904-908 (8 April)

Papers

Differences in mortality after fracture of hip: the East Anglian audit

C J Todd, senior research associate,a C J Freeman, research/audit assistant,b C Camilleri-Ferrante, consultant in public health medicine,b C R Palmer, medical statistician,a A Hyder, research/audit assistant,b C E Laxton, senior registrar,b M J Parker, research registrar,c B V Payne, consultant in medicine for the elderly,d N Rushton, consultant orthopaedic surgeon e

a Health Services Research Group, Department of Community Medicine, Institute of Public Health, University of Cambridge, Cambridge CB2 2SR, b Directorate of Public Health Medicine, Anglia and Oxford Regional Health Authority, Cambridge, c Department of Orthopaedics, Peterborough District Hospital, Peterborough, d Norfolk and Norwich Healthcare NHS Trust, Norwich, e Orthopaedic Research Unit, University of Cambridge Clinical School, Addenbrooke's Hospital, Cambridge

Correspondence to: Dr Todd.

Abstract

Objective: To investigate differences between hospitals in clinical management of patients admitted with fractured hip and to relate these to mortality at 90 days.
Design: A prospective audit of process and outcome of care based on interviews with patients, abstraction from records with standard proforma, and follow up at three months. Data were analysed with {chi}2 test and forward stepwise regression modelling of mortality.
Setting: All eight hospitals in East Anglia with trauma orthopaedic departments.
Patients: 580 consecutive patients admitted for fracture of neck of femur.
Main outcome measure: Mortality at 90 days.
Results: Patients admitted to each hospital were similar with respect to age, sex, pre-existing illnesses, and activities of daily living before fracture. In all, 560 (97%) were treated surgically, by a range of grades of surgeon. Two hundred and sixty one patients (45%; range between hospitals 10-91%) received pharmaceutical thromboembolic prophylaxis, 502 (93%; 81-99%) perioperative antibiotic prophylaxis. The incidence of fatal pulmonary emboli differed between patients who received and those who did not receive prophylaxis against deep vein thrombosis (P=0.001). Mortality at 90 days was 18%, differing significantly between hospitals (5-24%). One hospital had significantly better survival than the others (odds ratio 0.14; 95% confidence interval 0.04-0.48; P-0.0016).
Conclusions: No single factor or aspect of practice accounted for this protective effect. Lower mortality may be associated with the cumulative effects of several aspects of the organisation of treatment and the management of fracture of the hip, including thromboembolic pharmaceutical prophylaxis, antibiotic prophylaxis, and early mobilisation.

Key messages

  • Key messages

  • Being older, having a poorer level of activities of daily living, being male, and having a history of cardiovascular disease were important determinants of death

  • One of the hospitals had a much higher survival rate. This seemed to be due to an aggregate effect of the total package of care

  • Routine thromboembolic prophylaxis is indicated for patients with fractured hip

  • Written policies that include prophylaxis should be developed and implemented for this vulnerable group of patients if mortality is to be improved


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