# Impact of the Italian Healthcare Outcomes Program (PNE) on the Care Quality of the Poorest Performing Hospitals

**Authors:** Matteo Fiore, Alessandro Bianconi, Cecilia Acuti Martellucci, Annalisa Rosso, Enrico Zauli, Maria Elena Flacco, Lamberto Manzoli

PMC · DOI: 10.3390/healthcare12040431 · Healthcare · 2024-02-07

## TL;DR

The Italian healthcare program PNE helped some low-performing hospitals improve, but results varied significantly by region and hospital size.

## Contribution

This study evaluates the five-year impact of PNE on hospital performance, revealing regional and size-based disparities in improvement.

## Key findings

- 51.0% of low-performing hospitals improved their scores after five years.
- Southern Italian hospitals showed less improvement compared to Northern and Central regions.
- Larger hospitals had a significantly lower likelihood of improvement.

## Abstract

One of the main aims of the Italian National Healthcare Outcomes Program (Programma Nazionale Esiti, PNE) is the identification of the hospitals with the lowest performance, leading them to improve their quality. In order to evaluate PNE impact for a subset of outcome indicators, we evaluated whether the performance of the hospitals with the lowest scores in 2016 had significantly improved after five years. The eight indicators measured the risk-adjusted likelihood of the death of each patient (adjusted relative risk—RR) 30 days after the admission for acute myocardial infarction, congestive heart failure, stroke, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease, chronic kidney disease, femur fracture or lung and colon cancer. In 2016, the PNE identified 288 hospitals with a very low performance in at least one of the selected indicators. Overall, 51.0% (n = 147) of these hospitals showed some degree of improvement in 2021, and 27.4% of them improved so much that the death risk of their patients fell below the national mean value. In 34.7% of the hospitals, however, the patients still carried a mean risk of death >30% higher than the average Italian patient with the same disease. Only 38.5% of the hospitals in Southern Italy improved the scores of the selected indicators, versus 68.0% in Northern and Central Italy. Multivariate analyses, adjusting for the baseline performance in 2016, confirmed univariate results and showed a significantly lower likelihood of improvement with increasing hospital volume. Despite the overall methodological validity of the PNE system, current Italian policies and actions aimed at translating hospital quality scores into effective organizational changes need to be reinforced with a special focus on larger southern regions.

## Linked entities

- **Diseases:** acute myocardial infarction (MONDO:0004781), congestive heart failure (MONDO:0005009), stroke (MONDO:0005098), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (MONDO:0005002), chronic kidney disease (MONDO:0005300), lung cancer (MONDO:0005138), colon cancer (MONDO:0002032)

## Full-text entities

- **Diseases:** chronic kidney disease (MESH:D051436), lung and colon cancer (MESH:D008175), stroke (MESH:D020521), death (MESH:D003643), myocardial infarction (MESH:D009203), femur fracture (MESH:D000092524), congestive heart failure (MESH:D006333), chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (MESH:D029424)
- **Species:** Homo sapiens (human, species) [taxon 9606]

## Full text

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## Figures

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## References

39 references — full list in the complete paper: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10887701/full.md

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Source: https://tomesphere.com/paper/PMC10887701