Sunday 16 November 2014

English Surgeons to Publish Death Rates in New Proposals

In the news this week there's been some controversy over the proposals set by NHS England regarding the publishing of data on surgeons. More notably, the publishing of death rates by surgeon. Sir Bruce Keogh, Medical Director of NHS England has said "surgeons must publish the death rates for their patients or face penalties". This raises concerns over whether current surgeons will continue to practice under further statistical scrutiny. Indeed this has been a 'move to increase transparency', perhaps in a way too drastic in the view of many surgeons across the country. With over a decade of medical training, we should trust surgeons to have the best of intentions for every patient, no matter the condition, no matter the person. Perhaps this new movement will question every single surgeon in the country of their competency, and the techniques they utilise in the operations they carry out.

Sir Keogh also added that "we will lose some surgeons...as a consequence of this endeavour". In addition, he made the point that as those surgeons doing few operations may avoid attempting more under this new regulation, more procedures will be 'passed' between colleagues. The potential advantage is that surgeons will have their work load slightly reduced, enforcing the importance of quality, not quantity when performing surgeries. A heart surgeon himself, even though he is involved heavily in this field, he is adamant that 'this is not going to go away'.


Above: Surgeons performing operation (Wikipedia)

Let us consider the implications of this. The statistics shown for death rates may be physically true, but in the wrong context, they may be misleading. If so, this would provide doctors and governing bodies to make invalid conclusions. It will be important for surgeons to publish all deaths to make the results valid. For example, one particular heart surgeon may have a 'significantly high death rate', however it may be overlooked that he is considered the best in his department, having most extremely difficult operations passed onto him by his colleagues. Currently, most surgeons do publish death rates, and the patient has control on whether they would want an operation from a particular surgeon 'based on their figures'. I believe that there is a danger that patient could make poor decisions from these statistics alone, for reasons above, and that they may overlook the expertise and experience of a surgeon. Therefore it is important other factors are considered and presented to the patient for them to make a fully informed decision.


Credit to Ben Tufft for his article 'NHS Medical Director: Surgeons must publish death rates', published in The Independent, 16th November 2014. The full article can be seen here

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