National Audit of Hospital Mortality (NAHM)
In-hospital mortality patterns have been used internationally as one indicator of the quality of care. While there are a number of similar ways of doing this, the standardised mortality ratio (SMR) is the most commonly used approach for looking at hospital mortality patterns within a country.
The SMR is the ratio between the observed number of patients who die in hospital and the number that would be expected to die in hospital on the basis of the overall national rate. It is based on the primary reason a patient is admitted to hospital. Importantly this does not infer the cause of death.
The information comes from the Hospital In-Patient Enquiry (HIPE) system, which contains clinical and administrative data on patients who have been admitted to hospital and is routinely collected by all publicly funded acute hospitals. Personal information i.e. information which could be used to identify a patient such as name, address and date of birth, is not taken from the hospital system and is not used in this audit. Patient confidentiality and privacy is fully protected in this manner.
To ensure that “like is compared with like” across the diversity of hospitals, factors that potentially may directly influence the outcome are adjusted for in the analysis, for example, patient age and the presence of other serious illnesses to calculate the number of expected deaths.
**Purpose:** The objectives of NAHM are to:
1. Understand and improve the quality of hospital based mortality data.
2. Identify areas for improvement – NQAIS NAHM Tool.
3. Promote reflection on the quality of overall patient care.
‘In scope’ are all patients admitted on HIPE for in-hospital treatment.
‘Out of scope’ are Maternity patients, Day case patients and Mental Health patients. Also excluded are deaths which occur in ED as they are not captured on HIPE.
**Coverage:** National data.
Temporal coverage starts at 2005 and is updated quarterly.
Health Category
Language
Access Rights
Tags
- Organization
- National Office of Clinical Audit
- License
- Creative Commons Attribution
Metadata
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| Access Rights | http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/access-right/PUBLIC |
| Frequency | http://publications.europa.eu/resource/authority/frequency/ANNUAL |
| Id | 901e801c-772f-4a2a-b952-db522b091044 |
| Identifier | NDC-0082 |
| Isopen | True |
| Issued | 2015-01-01 |
| License Id | cc-by |
| License Title | Creative Commons Attribution |
| License Url | http://www.opendefinition.org/licenses/cc-by |
| Max Typical Age | 75 |
| Metadata Created | 2026-03-19T17:17:12.849621 |
| Metadata Modified | 2026-03-19T17:17:12.849624 |
| Min Typical Age | 18 |
| Modified | 2024-12-07 |
| Name | national-audit-of-hospital-mortality-nahm-82 |
| Notes | In-hospital mortality patterns have been used internationally as one indicator of the quality of care. While there are a number of similar ways of doing this, the standardised mortality ratio (SMR) is the most commonly used approach for looking at hospital mortality patterns within a country. The SMR is the ratio between the observed number of patients who die in hospital and the number that would be expected to die in hospital on the basis of the overall national rate. It is based on the primary reason a patient is admitted to hospital. Importantly this does not infer the cause of death. The information comes from the Hospital In-Patient Enquiry (HIPE) system, which contains clinical and administrative data on patients who have been admitted to hospital and is routinely collected by all publicly funded acute hospitals. Personal information i.e. information which could be used to identify a patient such as name, address and date of birth, is not taken from the hospital system and is not used in this audit. Patient confidentiality and privacy is fully protected in this manner. To ensure that “like is compared with like” across the diversity of hospitals, factors that potentially may directly influence the outcome are adjusted for in the analysis, for example, patient age and the presence of other serious illnesses to calculate the number of expected deaths. **Purpose:** The objectives of NAHM are to: 1. Understand and improve the quality of hospital based mortality data. 2. Identify areas for improvement – NQAIS NAHM Tool. 3. Promote reflection on the quality of overall patient care. ‘In scope’ are all patients admitted on HIPE for in-hospital treatment. ‘Out of scope’ are Maternity patients, Day case patients and Mental Health patients. Also excluded are deaths which occur in ED as they are not captured on HIPE. **Coverage:** National data. Temporal coverage starts at 2005 and is updated quarterly. |
| Num Resources | 0 |
| Num Tags | 3 |
| Number Of Records | 1860313 |
| Number Of Unique Individuals | 95830 |
| Private | False |
| Provenance | There is no dedicated data collection. Data for NQAIS NAHM is sourced from HIPE which is coded on discharge. HIPE data is sent from the HPO (Healthcare Pricing Office) to the NHIU (National Health Intelligence Unit) HSE then uploaded to the NQAIS NAHM Tool on a quarterly basis or more frequently as required. |
| Title | National Audit of Hospital Mortality (NAHM) |
| Type | dataset |
No history available for this dataset.