The Best Practice Tariff helps improve management of neck of femur fractures: a completed audit loop

Br J Hosp Med (Lond). 2013 Nov;74(11):644-7. doi: 10.12968/hmed.2013.74.11.644.

Abstract

Background: The Best Practice Tariff incentivizes hospitals in the UK to improve the care they deliver, and includes a requirement to deliver multiprofessional care to patients with neck of femur fractures. The Best Practice Tariff for 2010-11 included six targets: (1) surgery within 36 hours, (2) admission under consultant-led joint orthopaedic-geriatric care, (3) admission using a multidisciplinary assessment protocol, (4) review by a geriatrician within 72 hours, (5) geriatrician-directed multi-professional rehabilitation, and (6) assessment for falls and bone protection. The authors chose to audit their Trust's compliance with these targets.

Methods: A retrospective audit was conducted in 2011 at the authors' university-affiliated tertiary care hospital, which is a regional major trauma centre. Only patients 65 years or older, with fragility-type neck of femur fractures who were treated surgically at the authors' unit and were eligible for geriatric review and multiprofessional rehabilitation, were included. The results of this audit (2010-11 Best Practice Tariff targets) were analysed and a series of procedural and logistical measures were introduced. A re-audit was performed in April 2012 for 2011-12, and the results for the 2 years were compared using appropriate statistics (Chi square tests and analysis of variance). Thirty-day mortality was compared using the summary hospital-level mortality indicator.

Results: A total of 410 patients were eligible for Best Practice Tariff in 2010-11, which increased to 463 in 2011-12. The changes from the first year's audit helped increase the rates for 36-hour surgery from 48.3% to 73.4% and for 72-hour geriatric review from 68.8% to 81.8% (P<0.05). The annual Best Practice Tariff achievement increased from 31.7% to 61.3% (P<0.05). The summary hospital-level mortality indicator declined from 96.5 to 61.3.

Conclusions: Focusing on poorly satisfied Best Practice Tariff indicators can produce a significant improvement in the per capita Best Practice Tariff achievement. Further studies are needed to assess the health and financial gain in detail.

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Clinical Protocols*
  • Femoral Neck Fractures / mortality
  • Femoral Neck Fractures / surgery*
  • Femoral Neck Fractures / therapy
  • Geriatric Assessment
  • Humans
  • Length of Stay
  • Patient Care Team / organization & administration
  • Program Evaluation
  • Quality of Health Care / organization & administration*
  • Retrospective Studies
  • United Kingdom