Bronze level automatically awarded GB final
This data has achieved Bronze level on 29 October 2014 which means this data makes a great start at the basics of publishing open data.
Summary Hospital-level Mortality Indicator (SHMI) - Deaths associated with hospitalisation, England, Experimental Statistics
Summary
- Type of release
- a one-off release of a set of related datasets
- Licence
- UK Open Government Licence
- Verification
- automatically awarded
- Release Date
- 28 October 2011
- Modified Date
- 10 May 2014
- Publishers
- Health and Social Care Information Centre
- Keywords
- 2010, 2011, Health, april, associated, deaths, england, hospital, hospitalisation, indicator, level, march, mortality
Community verification
Other people can verify whether the answers on this certificate are correct.
This certificate is automatically awarded.
Sign in to verify or report this certificate
Description
Update (May 2012): SHMI figures for York Hospital Foundation Trust published October 2011 As a result of a submission error by York Hospital Foundation Trust (YHFT - provider code RCB), some of their data were not included in the analysis. This means that the SHMI figure published for YHFT in October 2011 will be incorrect, and is likely to be under-stated. Figures subsequently published in January 2012 and April 2012 have included the missing data and are not affected. Please take note that the figures for the SHMI publication in October 2011 will not be revised as the national impact of the changes is very limited. We have now published an additional document on our websites, HES SHMI Data Guidance in response to this incident. This guide was produced to help providers understand which HES extracts with the corresponding SUS/HES submission deadlines which will be used for the SHMI publications. Update (December 2011): Publication of palliative care contextual indicators To add some context to the interpretation of the SHMI we are publishing palliative care contextual indicators along with their specifications. These indicators report on the proportion of all admitted patients who are coded as receiving palliative care and the proportion of all patient mortalities coded as palliative care across all non-specialist acute providers reported on by the SHMI. This information will soon be published on the IC's indicator portal alongside the SHMI. In future, these contextual indicators will be published at the same time as the SHMI. The IC welcomes feedback and comments on these contextual indicators. This is the first publication of the Summary Hospital-level Mortality Indicator (SHMI). The SHMI is a ratio of the observed deaths in a trust over a period of time divided by the expected number given the characteristics of patients treated by that trust. When it's published The SHMI is produced and published quarterly by the NHS IC. Production and publication of the SHMI follows the Code of Practice for Official Statistics. The SHMI is being published as ‘Experimental Statistics' which are new Official Statistics that are under going review. Like all indicators managed by the NHS IC, the SHMI will be subject to continuous review, using the Indicator Assurance Process. Outputs from these reviews will be reported to the National Quality Board, and will be available on the NHS IC's website. How it's calculated The data used to calculate the SHMI is generated from data that Trusts have submitted to SUS (Secondary Uses Services). This data is then processed by the NHS IC to create HES data (Hospital Episode Statistics). Data from the Office for National Statistics (ONS) death registrations is linked to this HES data in order to capture deaths which occur outside hospitals. It is this linked dataset which is used to construct the SHMI. We expect that the SHMI will need to be interpreted, understood and also reproduced, if necessary, by interested parties. Therefore, the NHS IC has published the specification that details the construction of the SHMI along with related methodological information and details of the development process. How to use the SHMI The SHMI requires careful interpretation, and should not be taken in isolation as a headline figure of trust performance. It is best treated as a ‘smoke alarm'. The SHMI is an indication of whether individual trusts are conforming to the national baseline of hospital-related mortality. Mortality within a trust is described as either ‘as expected', ‘lower than expected' or ‘higher than expected'. Trusts whose SHMI value is ‘higher than expected' should follow-up – investigate to identify any underlying causes why this may be and action changes as appropriate. In addition, lessons could be learnt across the NHS from those trusts whose SHMI value is ‘lower than expected'. The SHMI value for each trust is plotted against the trust's expected number of deaths on ‘funnel plots'. If the observed number of deaths falls outside of an expected range the Trust in question will be considered to have a higher or lower SHMI than expected. The range, the extremes of which are called control limits, can be calculated in a variety of ways and are shown on the funnel plots. For the SHMI two options are presented: exact Poisson control limits at a 99.8% level and over dispersion control limits at a 95% level. Who can use SHMI The SHMI can be used locally by individual hospital trusts to assess and investigate their mortality related outcomes. Regulators and commissioning organisations can also use the SHMI to investigate outcomes for Trusts under their jurisdiction. In all of these cases the SHMI should not be used in isolation but in conjunction with other indicators and information from other sources (patient feedback, staff surveys and other such material) that together form a holistic view of Trust outcomes and a fuller overview of how Trust processes are impacting on outcomes. While the public and patients will be interested in the SHMI, is not intended primarily for use by patients or the public. Although this information is in the public domain it has not been specifically tailored to be easily accessible for a patient or public audience.
General Information
-
This data is described at
http://data.gov.uk/dataset/summary-hospital-level-mortality-indicator-deaths-associated-with-hospitalisation-england Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
This data is published by
Health and Social Care Information Centre Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
Legal Information
-
This data was
originally created or generated by its curator Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
The rights statement is at
http://data.gov.uk/dataset/summary-hospital-level-mortality-indicator-deaths-associated-with-hospitalisation-england Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
This data is available under
UK Open Government Licence Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
There are
yes, and the rights are all held by the same person or organisation Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
The content is available under
UK Open Government Licence Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
This data contains
no data about individuals Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
Practical Information
-
The data appears in this collection
http://data.gov.uk Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
Technical Information
-
The format of this data is
a standard open format Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
Social Information
-
The documentation includes machine-readable data for
title Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
The documentation includes machine-readable data for
description Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
The documentation includes machine-readable data for
publisher Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
The documentation includes machine-readable data for
keyword(s) or tag(s) Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
The documentation includes machine-readable data for
distribution(s) Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
The documentation includes machine-readable data for
release date Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know
-
The documentation includes machine-readable data for
modification date Do you think this data is incorrect? Let us know