Australia: The incidence of surgery-related mortality is being significantly reduced due to Victoriaโs state-wide audit, incorporating cutting-edge GIS technology. The Victoria Audit of Surgical Mortality (VASM) involves the clinical review of all cases where patients have died in hospital while under the care of a surgeon.
Esri Australia GIS in Health specialist Jeremy Pytel said the audit is using GIS technology to map and analyse complex patient health care data and deliver an insight into mortality rates.
โDuring the audit, information โ such as hospital locations, patient age and cause of death โ is digitally layered on a map, enabling the identification of previously unseen correlations in the data,โ explained Pytel.
โEmerging trends can then be analysed, including whether location-based demographic trends, such as population and gender mix, impact mortality. Alternatively, we can pinpoint whether clinical issues are key determinants,โ added Pytel.
Pytel noted that the Collegeโs GIS solution should set the standard for how other states manage their medical review processes. โGIS technology is used by the worldโs leading hospitals and medical institutions โ but until now Australiaโs healthcare system has really been lagging behind.โ
โItโs encouraging to see the College buck this trend and establish irrefutable evidence as to how valuable geographic insight can be in medical research. Together with the Victorian Department of Health, which also uses the technology, the College has been instrumental in establishing Victoria as the nationโs most progressive state in geomedicine,โ concluded Pytel.
The VASM is funded by the Victorian Department of Health and managed by the Royal Australasian College of Surgeon.
Source: Esri Australia