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Internet little help on hospital data: study

CHICAGO
Mon Sep 17, 2007 4:09pm EDT

CHICAGO (Reuters) - Patients facing surgery who try to check out the quality of hospitals beforehand by doing Internet searches often find conflicting and incomplete information posted, according to a study published on Monday.

The report was based on searches done a year ago on six publicly available Web sites that offer comparisons of hospital quality, Dr. Michael Leonardi and colleagues at the University of California Los Angeles School of Medicine said.

They sought information on how the hospitals were rated for laparoscopic gall bladder removal, hernia repair and colon removal -- all relatively common procedures.

The review found "suboptimal measures of quality and inconsistent results." For one thing, the study said, no site had real-time data and most of the information found was a year old.

There were also conflicts. One hospital rated best for colon removal by two sites was ranked worst by a third, said the report, published in the Archives of Surgery.

Three of the Web sites were privately operated by companies whose names were not disclosed by the study. The other three were public or nonprofit, including one offered by the U.S. government's Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

"For accessibility and data transparency, the government and nonprofit Web sites were best," Leonardi and colleagues wrote.

"For appropriateness, the proprietary Web sites were best, comparing multiple surgical procedures using a combination of process, structure and outcome measures. However, none of these sites explicitly defined terms such as complications."



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