Emergency Medicine Cardiac Research and Education Group




ACTION Registry
ACTION Registry®–GWTG™ is a national, risk-adjusted, outcomes-based quality improvement program that helps participating facilities measure and improve care for high-risk ACS patients with STEMI and NSTEMI. The result of the collaboration between the two leading national coronary artery disease registries, the NCDR® ACTION Registry® and the American Heart Association (AHA) Get With The GuidelinesSM-CAD Registry, ACTION Registry–GWTG will be the largest, most comprehensive national cardiovascular patient database ever developed by the medical profession.

Combining the strengths of the two programs, ACTION Registry–GWTG will collect a comprehensive set of data elements that provide healthcare professionals and their facilities with the information they need to monitor and improve adherence to the most current, science-based ACC/AHA treatment guidelines. Participation will greatly facilitate quality improvement efforts, optimize clinical care, and improve clinical outcomes for acute coronary syndrome patients.

Visit How To Join to request additional information or to download an enrollment package. Or, visit the ACTION website for more information.



Systematic Examination of the Updated Framingham Heart Study General Cardiovascular Risk Profile



Arch Intern Med 2009; 169: 1411–1419 View citation

Background: Recent initiatives have focused on reducing door-to-balloon (DTB) times among patients with acute myocardial infarction undergoing primary percutaneous coronary intervention. However, DTB time is only one of several important AMI care processes. It is unclear whether quality efforts targeted to a single process will facilitate concomitant improvement in other quality measures and outcomes.

Methods: This study examined 101 hospitals (43 678 patients with AMI) in the Get With the Guidelines program. For each hospital, DTB time improvement from 2005 to 2007 was correlated with changes in composite Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services/Joint Commission on Accreditation of Healthcare Organizations (CMS/JCAHO) core measure performance and inhospital mortality.

Results: Between 2005 and 2007, hospital geometric mean DTB time decreased from 101 to 87 minutes (P.001). Mean overall hospital composite CMS/JCAHO core measure performance increased from 93.4% to 96.4% (P.001), and mortality rates were 5.1% and 4.7% (P=.09) in the early and late periods, respectively. Improvement in hospitalDTB time, however, was not significantly correlated with changes in composite quality performance (r=-0.06; P=.55) or with in-hospital mortality (r=0.06; P=.58). After adjustment for patient mix, hospitals with the most improvement in DTB time did not have significantly greater improvements in either CMS/JCAHO measure performance or mortality.

Conclusions: WithintheGetWiththeGuidelinesprogram, DTBtimes decreased significantly over time.However,there was minimal correlation between DTB time improvement and changes in other quality measures or mortality. These resultsemphasizetheimportantneedforcomprehensiveacute myocardial infarction quality-improvement efforts, rather than focusing on single process measures.





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