Value of keeping records of mortality

Eur J Surg. 2002;168(8-9):436-40. doi: 10.1080/110241502321116406.

Abstract

Objective: To evaluate treatment and complications which is essential for good medical practice.

Design: Prospective audit.

Setting: City hospital, The Netherlands.

Subjects: All the patients who died on the surgical ward between 1994 and 1998 and were classified according to four categories of mortality recording.

Interventions: The causes of death, inaccuracies in treatment and the extent of agreement between premortem and postmortem findings were documented.

Main outcome measures: Morbidity and mortality.

Results: Of the 11,195 patients admitted, 420 (4%) deceased during their hospital stay. Most patients died of the disease with which they presented at admission (n = 176, 42%) or of complications (n = 167, 40%). In 20% (n = 83) of the cases a shortcoming in the clinical course was found. 251 of the 420 patients who died (60%) had a necropsy. 53 of the 251 reports (21%) gave information that could have had an effect on the treatment or the clinical course.

Conclusions: Recording mortality is a way of testing the diagnostic and therapeutic accuracy in our quest for a high quality of care.

MeSH terms

  • Autopsy
  • Cause of Death
  • Diagnosis
  • Humans
  • Medical Audit*
  • Medical Records*
  • Mortality*
  • Netherlands
  • Therapeutics / standards