Certification of Vascular Centers - A Project of the German Society for Vascular Surgery

H. H. Eckstein, H. P. Niedermeier, T. Noppeney, T. Umscheid, H. Wenk, H. Imig

Research output: Contribution to journalArticlepeer-review

9 Scopus citations

Abstract

Objectives: Due to the progress vascular medicine has made in conventional vascular surgery, endovascular procedures, and conservative therapy close, interdisciplinary cooperation is required. In order to assure the contextual and structural quality of vascular centers, the German Society for Vascular Surgery established a list of criteria for certification of each interdisciplinary vascular center. Material and methods: Between July 2002 and December 2005, 77 centers have submitted a written application and have been audited by the commission for quality assurance of the German Society for Vascular Surgery, 59 vascular centers were certified for a period of 3 years with one center in each in Austria and in Switzerland, 13 centers were not certified (16.8%), and the applications of 5 centers are still pending. This analysis is based on 57 German certified vascular centers. Results: Each center treats a median of 1149 inpatients (11% of these are emergency admissions) and 2159 outpatients per year. Sixty percent of the patients treated have an arterial disease. All centers have vascular surgery and radiology departments. In 11 out of 57 centers, angiology services are offered in cooperation with affiliated physicians. Each vascular center has an average of 4.2 vascular surgeons, 3 radiologists and 1 angiologist. All centers offer radiological and ultrasound diagnostics (CT angiography in 100%, MRT in 95%, duplex sonography in 100%). Each clinic executes a median of 521 (233-1436) arterial operations and 263 (37-1055) arterial interventions. In addition, they execute varicose surgeries (n = 217), shunt applications/revisions (n = 58), minor amputations (n = 57) and major amputations (n = 42). They conduct 338 (92-3606) conservative therapies per year (POAD, diabetic foot, phlebothrombosis, chronic venous insufficiency). Conclusions: The certification of interdisciplinary vascular centers is a new approach to assure the contextual and structural quality of interdisciplinary vascular centers.

Original languageEnglish
Pages (from-to)279-285
Number of pages7
JournalEuropean Journal of Vascular and Endovascular Surgery
Volume32
Issue number3
DOIs
StatePublished - Sep 2006
Externally publishedYes

Keywords

  • Certification
  • Vascular center

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