Pneumonia and influenza cause substantial morbidity and mortality for Medicare patients. This project focuses on changing processes of care to improve outcomes for Medicare beneficiaries admitted to the hospital with pneumonia. An additional objective is to increase rates of vaccination against influenza and pneumococcal disease.
Pneumonia and influenza are the seventh leading causes of death in the United States. Pneumonia accounts for nearly 600,000 Medicare patient hospitalizations and more than 4.5 million inpatient days each year. In 1993 more than $3.5 billion was spent on inpatient care of Medicare patients with pneumonia. Pneumonia is also the principal reason for more than 500,000 emergency department visits by Medicare patients each year. The incidence of pneumonia increases with age, and more than 90 percent of deaths due to this condition are in the population aged 65 and older.
Main Objective
To decrease the morbidity and mortality associated with community-acquired pneumonia in Medicare beneficiaries.
Quality Indicators
American Academy of Family Physicians
American College of Emergency Physicians
American College of Physicians
American Health Care Association
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
American Medical Association
American Medical Directors Association
American Geriatrics Society
American Osteopathic Association
American Public Health Association
American Pharmaceutical Association
Association for Professionals in Infection Control and Epidemiology
American Society for Clinical Pathology
Association of Schools of Public Health
American Lung Association
American Thoracic Society
Hospital Quality Initiative
MedQIC Pneumonia