Clinical Outcomes at Fortis Healthcare
Fortis clinical outcomes are based on measurement of disease course and progression, quality of clinical care being provided, the success of the procedures/interventions carried out, and actual benefit perceived by the patient.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.Fortis clinical outcomes are based on measurement of disease course and progression, quality of clinical care being provided, the success of the procedures/interventions carried out, and actual benefit perceived by the patient.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.Fortis clinical outcomes are based on measurement of disease course and progression, quality of clinical care being provided, the success of the procedures/interventions carried out, and actual benefit perceived by the patient.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.
View Hospital Wise Clinical Outcome
Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG)
About Clinical research
A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.
Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG), commonly known as Heart Bypass surgery/ Coronary Bypass surgery, is a surgical procedure which creates alternate routes for blood to flow to the heart tissue, bypassing the narrowed/blocked arteries (leading to what is known as Coronary Artery Disease). For this purpose, a healthy blood vessel (also called a graft) taken from one area of patient’s own body is placed around the narrowed/blocked area to restore blood flow to the heart. The goal of this procedure is to relieve symptoms of coronary artery disease (including angina), enable the patient to resume a normal lifestyle and to lower the risk of a heart attack or other heart problems. arteries (leading to what is known as Coronary Artery Disease)..
About CABG Clinical Outcome
CABG outcome indicators provide measures of overall success of the surgery and patient’s post-procedure clinical condition. These parameters are globally accepted evidence-based scientific criteria to indicate quality of procedure and patient’s health status. Fortis hospitals measure the following outcomes parameters for CABG, and our performance consistently matches the global benchmarks set by best-in-class hospitals.
Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG) one
About Clinical research
A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.A clinical outcome is a measurable change in symptoms, overall health, ability to function, quality of life, or survival outcomes that result from giving care to patients.
Coronary Artery Bypass Graft (CABG), commonly known as Heart Bypass surgery/ Coronary Bypass surgery, is a surgical procedure which creates alternate routes for blood to flow to the heart tissue, bypassing the narrowed/blocked arteries (leading to what is known as Coronary Artery Disease). For this purpose, a healthy blood vessel (also called a graft) taken from one area of patient’s own body is placed around the narrowed/blocked area to restore blood flow to the heart. The goal of this procedure is to relieve symptoms of coronary artery disease (including angina), enable the patient to resume a normal lifestyle and to lower the risk of a heart attack or other heart problems. arteries (leading to what is known as Coronary Artery Disease)..
About CABG Clinical Outcome
CABG outcome indicators provide measures of overall success of the surgery and patient’s post-procedure clinical condition. These parameters are globally accepted evidence-based scientific criteria to indicate quality of procedure and patient’s health status. Fortis hospitals measure the following outcomes parameters for CABG, and our performance consistently matches the global benchmarks set by best-in-class hospitals.
Outcome Parameters View Previous Year Data
View Hospital Wise Clinical Outcome
Fortis Clinical Results Journey
- January 2013
Kick off with Clinical Outcomes Monitoring for 3 procedures – CABG, PTCA, KTP
January 2015Fortis Clinical Results Travel Fortis Clinical Results Travel Fortis Clinical Results Travel
August 2019Although health care outcomes and goals are defined nationally, health systems can set more aggressive goals. Meeting and exceeding these national goals benefits not only the quality of care, but also the marketing and contracting efforts of health organizations.
August 2018Although health care outcomes and goals are defined nationally, health systems can set more aggressive goals. Meeting and exceeding these national goals benefits not only the quality of care, but also the marketing and contracting efforts of health organizations.
August 2019Although health care outcomes and goals are defined nationally, health systems can set more aggressive goals. Meeting and exceeding these national goals benefits not only the quality of care, but also the marketing and contracting efforts of health organizations.
August 2020Although healthcare outcomes and targets are defined at the national level, health systems might set more aggressive targets. Meeting and exceeding these national targets, benefits not only quality of care, but also healthcare organizations’ marketing and contracting efforts.
August 2021Reporting and accreditation entities have procedures in place for normalizing outcome data for reference, which is important when it comes to reporting. It's easy to take data out of context. For example, using the decline rate, if a small, 10-bed hospital sees 10 patients a month and one patient falls, their decline rate is higher (10%).
August 2022The Joint Commission is a regulatory body that accredits health systems and has national standards for quality measures that are "developed with input from healthcare professionals, providers, subject matter experts, consumers, government agencies (including CMS) and employers." New Standard Must Meet the Following Strict Requirements:
August 2022The Joint Commission is a regulatory body that accredits health systems and has national standards for quality measures that are "developed with input from healthcare professionals, providers, subject matter experts, consumers, government agencies (including CMS) and employers." New Standard Must Meet the Following Strict Requirements:
August 2023Skin breakdown- occurs when pressure reduces blood flow to the skin. A skin assessment tool can be used to reduce skin breakdown. Patients with skin breakdowns are at a higher risk of infection. For example, if they are diabetic, patients' risk scores increase, because their circulation is poor.