Data released by The National Hip Fracture Database (NHFD) shows that two in five patients are not receiving all of the recommended elements of a hip fracture programme that represent ‘best practice’.
NHFD is an NHS quality improvement programme that has dramatically improved the care of elderly people admitted to hospital with a hip fracture. Now in its 10th year, the database has continuously collected data on all over 60 year olds with a hip fracture in England, Wales and Northern Ireland since 2007. During this time more than half a million patient records have been submitted, enabling comprehensive monitoring of patient care from admission to hospital through to post-discharge follow-up.
Reporting on NHFD data has contributed to major improvements in patient treatment and care, including:
• The number of hospitals participating in the NHFD has increased from 11 in 2007 to 177 in 2017 – every acute hip fracture unit in England, Wales and Northern Ireland
• The rate of early surgery has increased from 55% in 2007 to 71% in 2016 meaning that more patients than ever are promptly relieved of pain and so able to commence rehabilitation
• Improved 30-day mortality after hip fracture, from 10.9% in 2007 to 6.7% in 2016 means that this year over 2,700 more patients survived the injury than did so in 2007
• Hip fracture services nationwide are able to monitor their services and implement continuous quality improvement using real-time online performance charts.
The NHFD report analyses the process and outcomes of care of nearly 65,000 people who presented with a hip fracture across 177 hospitals. It reports much good practice within inpatient care, with the majority of patients getting prompt surgery, specialist geriatric assessment and consideration of their nutritional status.
But, across the country nearly 40% of patients are still not receiving the full package of care that represents best practice and are missing out on important clinical assessments that will improve their rehabilitation and recovery after this serious injury. In addition, in England, the full package attracts the £1,335 additional payment of Best Practice Tariff (BTF), so hospitals are missing out on potential income.
Antony Johansen, geriatrician clinical lead for the NHFD said: “The elements of care that define best practice in England are designed to encourage teams to deliver key elements of a hip fracture programme – a multidisciplinary, patient-centred approach that considers the wider health of frail people with this potentially life-changing injury.
“If 40% of patients are not receiving this care – usually because they miss out on just one or two elements, this could compromise their rehabilitation and recovery. If this figure could be halved then a typical unit seeing 360 cases a year would attract an additional £100,000 in BPT each year – an obvious target in financially challenging times.”