In-Hospital Mortality

Which Conditions Have the Highest In-Hospital Mortality Rate?

Table 14. Conditions with Highest In-Patient Mortality Rate


Principal diagnoses                                             In-hospital mortality
                                                                             (percent)               
________________________________________________________________________________________

1.  Shock                                                                         51.2
2.  Cardiac arrest and ventricular fibrillation                                   51.0
3.  Malignant neoplasm without specification of site                              29.8
4.  Adult respiratory failure, insufficiency, arrest                              22.7
5.  Lack of oxygen in infants (intrauterine hypoxia and birth asphyxia)           20.4
6.  Aspiration pneumonitis (from food or vomit)                                   19.0
7.  Leukemias                                                                     18.9
8.  Cancer of liver and intrahepatic bile duct                                    17.8
9.  Coma, stupor, and brain damage                                                16.3
10. Cancer of bronchus or lung                                                    15.2

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Which Conditions Have the Highest Mortality for Various Age Groups?

Table 15. Conditions with the Highest In-Hospital Mortality

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Top 10 diagnoses by age group Years
<1 1-17 18-44 45-64 65-79 80+
Number of discharges (in thousands)
Lack of oxygen in infants (intrauterine hypoxia and birth asphyxia) 20.4          
Prematurity (short gestation) and low birth weight 4.6          
Respiratory distress syndrome (infant) 4.6          
Birth trauma 4.0          
Other perinatal conditions 1.6          
Other congenital anomalies 0.6          
Nervous system congenital anomalies 0.4          
Heart defects (cardiac and circulatory congenital anomalies) 2.6 0.4        
Immunity disorders 0.4 1.4        
Cardiac arrest and ventricular fibrillation 0.5 0.5 3.3 12.5 21.1 12.9
Cystic fibrosis 0 0.6        
Other injuries and conditions due to external causes   0.5        
Cancer, other and unspecified primary   0.5        
Intracranial injury   0.8 2.5      
Coma, stupor, and brain damage   0.6 1.8     4.0
Leukemia   0.5 2.1 4.6 7.9  
Shock   0.7 3.1 8.4 17.2 21.5
HIV infection     6.1      
Hodgkin's disease     3.3      
Crushing injury or internal injury     1.9      
Liver disease, alcohol related     2.5 6.4    
Malignant neoplasm without specification of site     1.8 8.4 13.7 5.8
Cancer of esophagus       5.1    
Secondary malignancy       4.2    
Other liver diseases       3.9    
Cancer of liver and intrahepatic bile duct       6.0 7.0  
Cancer of bronchus or lung       4.7 7.9  
Cancer of pancreas         6.4  
Myeloma         6.2  
Respiratory failure, insufficiency, arrest (adult)         10.2 7.4
Aneurysm         6.9 4.5
Aspiration pneumontis (from food or vomit)           11.2
Acute and unspecified kidney failure           6.4
Blood infection (septicemia)           6.4
Stroke (acute cerebrovascular disease)           4.2

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Source of Data for This Report

The data presented in this report are drawn from the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP), a Federal-State industry partnership to build a multi-State health care data system. This partnership is sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality and is managed by staff in AHRQ's Center for Organization and Delivery Studies. HCUP is based on data collected by individual States and forwarded to AHRQ by the States. HCUP would not be possible without State data collection projects and their partnership with AHRQ.

For 1997, 22 State data organizations contributed their data to AHRQ where all data are edited and transformed into a uniform format. The uniform data in HCUP databases make possible comparative studies of health care services and the use and cost of hospital care, including:

HCUP includes short-term, non-Federal, community hospitals. General and specialty hospitals such as pediatric, obstetrics-gynecology, short-term rehabilitation, and oncology hospitals are included, but long-term care and psychiatric hospitals are excluded.

HCUP includes two sets of databases for health services research. The State Inpatient Databases (SID) for 1997 cover inpatient care in community hospitals in 22 States and include nearly 60 percent of all hospital discharges in the U.S. The Nationwide Inpatient Sample includes all discharges from a sample of about 1,000 hospitals drawn from the SID, adjusted to approximate a national sample.

This report is based on data from the NIS. The NIS approximates a 20-percent sample of U.S. "community" hospitals, as defined by the American Hospital Association (AHA). The NIS for 1997 includes information from 7.1 million discharges which were weighted to obtain estimates that represent the total number of inpatient hospital discharges in the United States (35.4 million).

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Methods

The Clinical Classifications Software (CCS), developed by AHRQ, has been used throughout this chartbook to aggregate diagnosis codes into a limited number of categories. Diagnoses recorded on hospital discharge records are coded using the International Classification of Diseases, 9th Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-9-CM), Fifth Edition. Although ICD-9-CM may be used to provide descriptive statistics, aggregating similar diagnoses or procedures into clinically meaningful categories, such as the CCS, can be more helpful. Select for more information on CCS online.

Frequencies and rankings of diagnoses are based on principal, or first-listed, diagnosis. The unit of analysis is the inpatient stay rather than the patient. All discharges have been weighted to produce national estimates.

Total charges in HCUP data are the amount the hospital charged or billed for the entire hospital stay and do not necessarily reflect reimbursements or costs. Charges do not include professional (physician) fees. Charge data were present for 98 percent of all discharges. Charges are generally higher than costs.

Because the NIS is limited to inpatient hospital data, conditions treated in outpatient settings are not reflected here.

Many medical terms are used throughout this report. For help in understanding these terms, refer to the Glossary.

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