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Hawaii Hospital Compliance - Detail

Surgery Patients Who Were Given an Antibiotic Within One Hour Before Surgery to Help Prevent Infection

Giving patients antibiotics right before surgery helps to boost the patient's ability to fight off contamination during surgery that could lead to infection. Studies show that patients given antibiotics either more than one hour before or after the first surgical incision is made experience higher rates of infection compared to those who are given antibiotics within one hour before surgery begins.

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Medium

Hawaii Hospitals with Low Compliance for this Procedure

Low compliance describes hospitals that followed this infection prevention procedure 79 percent of the time or less. The compliance level of hospitals which report a small number of cases (fewer than 25) should not be regarded as reliably predicting performance; these hospitals are displayed in italics and include Note 1. "Patients" is the number of patients for which data was submitted. The change columns describe the change in compliance and the change in the number of patients as compared to the previous quarter. Click the hospital names to access detailed information. The chart below lists hospitals in order based on the number of patients sampled (hospitals serving the largest number of patients first). You can re-sort the table by clicking on the table headers.

HospitalComplianceChangePatientsChangeNotes
4 of 17 total surgical sites.
[1] The number of cases is too small (fewer than 25) to reliably tell how well a hospital is performing.
[2] The hospital indicated that the data submitted for this measure were based on a sample of cases.
[3] Data was collected during a shorter time period (fewer quarters) than the maximum possible time for this measure (One quarter equals three months.)
[4] Inaccurate information submitted and suppressed for one or more quarters.
[5] No data is available from the hospital for this measure.
Wilcox Memorial Hospital73%+1.0%197+112
Hilo Medical Center66%-3.0%65-62
Hawaii Medical Center West58%+13.0%400
Wahiawa General Hospital (< 25)50%+21.0%10+31 and 2

Hawaii Hospitals with High Compliance for this Procedure

High compliance describes hospitals that followed this infection prevention procedure 95 percent of the time or more. The compliance level of hospitals which report a small number of cases (fewer than 25) should not be regarded as reliably predicting performance; these hospitals are displayed in italics and include Note 1. "Patients" is the number of patients for which data was submitted. The change columns describe the change in compliance and the change in the number of patients as compared to the previous quarter. Click the hospital names to access detailed information. The chart below lists hospitals in order based on the number of patients sampled (hospitals serving the largest number of patients first). You can re-sort the table by clicking on the table headers.

HospitalComplianceChangePatientsChangeNotes
6 of 17 total surgical sites.
[1] The number of cases is too small (fewer than 25) to reliably tell how well a hospital is performing.
[2] The hospital indicated that the data submitted for this measure were based on a sample of cases.
[3] Data was collected during a shorter time period (fewer quarters) than the maximum possible time for this measure (One quarter equals three months.)
[4] Inaccurate information submitted and suppressed for one or more quarters.
[5] No data is available from the hospital for this measure.
Castle Medical Center98%0.0%184-62
Kapiolani Medical Center at Pali Momi98%0.0%184-192
Kuakini Medical Center98%0.0%254+12
Maui Memorial Medical Center96%+1.0%211-222
Kaiser Foundation Hospital95%+1.0%618+62
The Queens Medical Center95%0.0%1169-732

All Hawaii Hospitals

This chart describes the infection prevention compliance rates for this procedure for all reporting hospitals in the state. This list also includes hospitals that did not submit any data to CMS for this procedure or do not have cause to perform this procedure. The compliance level of hospitals which report a small number of cases (fewer than 25) should not be regarded as reliably predicting performance; these hospitals are displayed in italics and include Note 1. "Patients" is the number of patients for which data was submitted. The change columns describe the change in compliance and the change in the number of patients as compared to the previous quarter. Click the hospital names to access detailed information and re-sort the table by clicking on the table headers.

HospitalComplianceChangePatientsChangeNotes
17 of 17 total surgical sites.
[1] The number of cases is too small (fewer than 25) to reliably tell how well a hospital is performing.
[2] The hospital indicated that the data submitted for this measure were based on a sample of cases.
[3] Data was collected during a shorter time period (fewer quarters) than the maximum possible time for this measure (One quarter equals three months.)
[4] Inaccurate information submitted and suppressed for one or more quarters.
[5] No data is available from the hospital for this measure.
Castle Medical Center98%0.0%184-62
Kapiolani Medical Center at Pali Momi98%0.0%184-192
Kuakini Medical Center98%0.0%254+12
Maui Memorial Medical Center96%+1.0%211-222
Kaiser Foundation Hospital95%+1.0%618+62
The Queens Medical Center95%0.0%1169-732
Kona Community Hospital94%+1.0%48-72
Straub Clinic and Hospital94%-1.0%433+142
Hawaii Medical Center East93%+1.0%265-252
North Hawaii Community Hospital89%-3.0%73+12
Wilcox Memorial Hospital73%+1.0%197+112
Hilo Medical Center66%-3.0%65-62
Hawaii Medical Center West58%+13.0%400
Wahiawa General Hospital (< 25)50%+21.0%10+31 and 2
Kahuku Medical CenterN/AN/AN/AN/A5
Kula HospitalN/AN/AN/AN/A5
Molokai General HospitalN/AN/AN/AN/A5