Abstract

BackgroundQuality standards are important for improving health care by providing compelling evidence for best practice. High quality person-centered health care requires information on patients' experience of disease and of functioning in daily life.ObjectiveTo analyze and compare the content of five Swedish National Quality Registries (NQRs) and two standard sets of the International Consortium of Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM) related to cardiovascular diseases.Materials and methodsAn analysis of 2588 variables (= data items) of five NQRs—the Swedish Registry of Congenital Heart Disease, Swedish Cardiac Arrest Registry, Swedish Catheter Ablation Registry, Swedish Heart Failure Registry, SWEDEHEART (including four sub-registries) and two ICHOM standard sets–the Heart Failure Standard Set and the Coronary Artery Disease Standard Set. According to the name and definition of each variable, the variables were mapped to Donabedian’s quality criteria, whereby identifying whether they capture health care processes or structures or patients’ health outcomes. Health outcomes were further analyzed whether they were clinician- or patient-reported and whether they capture patients’ physiological functions, anatomical structures or activities and participation.ResultsIn total, 606 variables addressed process quality criteria (31%), 58 structure quality criteria (3%) and 760 outcome quality criteria (38%). Of the outcomes reported, 85% were reported by clinicians and 15% by patients. Outcome variables addressed mainly ‘Body functions’ (n = 392, 55%) or diseases (n = 209, 29%). Two percent of all documented data captured patients’ lived experience of disease and their daily activities and participation (n = 51, 3% of all variables).ConclusionsQuality standards in the cardiovascular field focus predominately on processes (e.g. treatment) and on body functions-related outcomes. Less attention is given to patients’ lived experience of disease and their daily activities and participation. The results can serve as a starting-point for harmonizing data and developing a common person-centered quality indicator set.

Highlights

  • Quality, safety and the efficiency of health care systems and public health strategies are strongly related to effectively capturing and managing information [1,2]

  • Since the 1990s, the European Parliament has been calling for effective health information systems and the development of harmonized health indicators as a first step [3]

  • The core idea behind high quality value-based health care is that patients should receive interventions that primarily aim to improve their quality of life and to prolong their life [4]

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Summary

Objective

Data Availability Statement: Our data came from freely available variable-lists of five cardiovascular National Quality Registries (including four subregistries) and two standard sets from the International Consortium for Health Outcome Measurements available in 2017 with a total number of 2588 variables: www.ichom.org; www. kvalitetsregister.se. Data Availability Statement: Our data came from freely available variable-lists of five cardiovascular National Quality Registries (including four subregistries) and two standard sets from the International Consortium for Health Outcome Measurements available in 2017 with a total number of 2588 variables: www.ichom.org; www. To analyze and compare the content of five Swedish National Quality Registries (NQRs) and two standard sets of the International Consortium of Health Outcomes Measurement (ICHOM) related to cardiovascular diseases

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