09.02.2022 Views

ANZHFR 2021 Annual Report

The ANZHFR is very pleased to be able to provide you with the 2021 Annual Report. We would like to express our appreciation to all the people who have been involved in collecting, collating and analysing the data for this report and those who have put in a great effort progressing it to completion. We hope you will find the Annual Report enlightening and useful as you continue in your endeavours to improve the quality of hip fracture care for your patients. The Australian State report is included in both the Clinical Care Standard Report and the Full e-Report, rather than as a separate Supplementary report as in previous years. For the first time, the reports also include an Outlier Report, which monitors hospital performance against the quality indicators and enables sites to easily see areas of high quality care or those that require review. A PowerPoint slide pack has also been provided should you wish to use it. The slides follow the structure of the Clinical Care Standard Report (excluding Australian State Report and they can be customised to highlight your hospital’s performance and add in any other relevant information e.g., additional figures from the full report or other site-specific information. There is included a pull-out text box and pointer for the hospital level charts. These can be moved down the axis, to line up with your hospital. The pointer and text box can also be positioned separately – simply click on the text box if you need to move it whilst leaving the pointer in place. This is useful towards the bottom of each slide. If you want to highlight more than one hospital, the pointer and text box can be copied and pasted

The ANZHFR is very pleased to be able to provide you with the 2021 Annual Report. We would like to express our appreciation to all the people who have been involved in collecting, collating and analysing the data for this report and those who have put in a great effort progressing it to completion. We hope you will find the Annual Report enlightening and useful as you continue in your endeavours to improve the quality of hip fracture care for your patients.

The Australian State report is included in both the Clinical Care Standard Report and the Full e-Report, rather than as a separate Supplementary report as in previous years. For the first time, the reports also include an Outlier Report, which monitors hospital performance against the quality indicators and enables sites to easily see areas of high quality care or those that require review.

A PowerPoint slide pack has also been provided should you wish to use it. The slides follow the structure of the Clinical Care Standard Report (excluding Australian State Report and they can be customised to highlight your hospital’s performance and add in any other relevant information e.g., additional figures from the full report or other site-specific information. There is included a pull-out text box and pointer for the hospital level charts. These can be moved down the axis, to line up with your hospital. The pointer and text box can also be positioned separately – simply click on the text box if you need to move it whilst leaving the pointer in place. This is useful towards the bottom of each slide. If you want to highlight more than one hospital, the pointer and text box can be copied and pasted

SHOW MORE
SHOW LESS

Create successful ePaper yourself

Turn your PDF publications into a flip-book with our unique Google optimized e-Paper software.

Indicator 5a: Proportion of patients with a hip fracture who are mobilised on day one post

hip fracture surgery.

Figures 11 and 12 provide insight into service configurations that support early mobilisation by providing patients with

the opportunity to stand up and sit out of bed, or walk, on the first day after surgery. Figure 11 shows that 89% of hip

fracture patients in New Zealand and 90% in Australia are given the opportunity to mobilise the day after surgery.

A new variable was included in 2020 to capture the proportion of patients with a hip fracture who actually mobilise

on day one post surgery. Mobilise means the patient managed to stand and step transfer out of bed onto a chair/

commode and/or walk. This does not include only sitting over the edge of the bed or standing up from the bed

without stepping/walking.

Despite 90% of patients being given the opportunity to mobilise on day one, 40% of patients in New Zealand and

49% of patients in Australia achieved first day mobilisation (Figure 12). Substantial variation exists between hospitals,

which may partially reflect elements of care such as availability of weekend therapy.

84% of hospitals in Australia and

72% of hospitals in New Zealand can

access weekend therapy services

ANZHFR / ANNUAL REPORT 2021

37

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!