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American College of Surgeons: Press Releases
News from the American College of Surgeons
For Immediate Release: September 1, 2011

Contact:
Sally Garneski
American College of Surgeons
312-202-5409
pressinquiry@facs.org

 

Stacey Rammer
Weber Shandwick
952-346-6234 or 612-702-1147
srammer@webershandwick.com

American College of Surgeons, Maryland Health Care Leaders Highlight Quality Improvement Programs’ Role in Saving Lives, Lowering Health Care Costs

U.S. Senator Ben Cardin Delivers Keynote; Speaks to Cost-Saving Benefits for Washington

CHICAGO (Sept.1, 2011) – The American College of Surgeons (ACS) continued its surgical health care quality national tour on Aug. 30 with its second community forum sponsored by Johns Hopkins Department of Surgery and Johns Hopkins Armstrong Institute for Patient Safety and Quality at the Johns Hopkins Medical Campus in Baltimore, MD. U.S. Senator Ben Cardin (D-MD) served as keynote speaker at the event, which was attended by 80 Maryland health care leaders. The community forum is part of the ACS Inspiring Quality initiative to raise awareness of proven models of quality improvement, coordinated care and disease management that can help improve the quality and value of health care.

Hosted by Julie Freischlag, MD, FACS, The William Stewart Halsted Professor and Chair at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine’s Department of Surgery and a member of the ACS Board of Regents, the forum featured panelists who are surgical and nursing leaders from The Johns Hopkins Hospital, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Sinai Hospital of Baltimore and the University of Maryland School of Medicine. These individuals came together to participate in a discussion on quality improvement programs that reduce complications, improve outcomes and cut health care costs. 

“When we’re looking for higher quality at lower costs, we’ve really found common ground with the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program (ACS NSQIP) that shows we can prevent complications, improve care and reduce costs,” said Dr. Freischlag. “The average savings per hospital can be millions of dollars as we work to prevent complications. Potential yearly savings if 4,500 hospitals across the nation adopt NSQIP could be $13-26 billion, with an estimated total savings over a decade approaching $260 billion,” she said, citing statistics from a 2009 study in the Annals of Surgery that found participating hospitals prevent 250-500 complications and save 12-36 lives per hospital, per year1.

Ronald R. Peterson, President, The Johns Hopkins Hospital and Health System, introduced Senator Cardin, praising the lawmaker for being a long-time patient advocate and touching on how hospitals and health systems nationwide are eager to identify and use the tools that can help improve patient safety to reduce adverse outcomes and save lives.

“We are the most expensive nation in health care. It’s not sustainable. Our goal in Washington is to figure out how we can do things more cost-effectively in health care and that’s exactly what you were talking about,” said Senator Cardin referencing Dr. Freischlag’s opening remarks about ACS NSQIP. “The $250 billion in cost savings caught my attention – that and lives saved. That’s a lot of money. That could go a long way in dealing with costs in health care, and that’s just in surgery.”

Currently about 400 hospitals participate in ACS NSQIP, which is based on collecting clinical, risk-adjusted, 30-day outcomes data in a nationally benchmarked database. Called “Best in the Nation” by the Institute of Medicine, ACS NSQIP is serving as a national model for outcomes-based quality improvement. In early August, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) announced in its fiscal year 2012 Inpatient Prospective Payment System (IPPS) final rule that it is considering implementing two ACS NSQIP outcomes measures as early as 2015. Also, beginning in 2014, hospitals will need to report on participation in a general surgery registry as part of the new CMS value-based purchasing program.

To encourage hospitals to collaborate and share best practices in quality improvement, ACS will host a series of community forums across the nation with health care leaders representing academic medical centers and medical schools, hospitals and not-for-profit health care associations. Following Tuesday’s forum, other ACS Inspiring Quality locations will potentially include California, Massachusetts, Minnesota, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia and the state of Washington.

Comments made by panelists during the community forum, included:

To view the archived forum video, visit www.facs.org/quality/jh.html.

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About the American College of Surgeons
The American College of Surgeons is a scientific and educational organization of surgeons that was founded in 1913 to raise the standards of surgical practice and to improve the care of the surgical patient. The College is dedicated to the ethical and competent practice of surgery. Its achievements have significantly influenced the course of scientific surgery in America and have established it as an important advocate for all surgical patients. The College has more than 77,000 members and is the largest organization of surgeons in the world. For more information, visit www.facs.org.

1. Hall, BL et al. "Does Surgical Quality Improve in the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program." Ann Surg. 2009 Sep; 250(3):363-76.

 

Online September 1, 2011

News from the College