A Gap That Has Existed for Years
Inter-hospital transport (IHT) — moving a critically ill adult from one medical facility to another — is a high-stakes process that happens thousands of times every day. Patients on ventilators, cardiac monitors, and multiple IV drips must be moved without interruption to their care.
Despite how common and risky this is, there has been no widely accepted set of quality indicators — measurable standards that hospitals and transport teams can use to evaluate whether they're doing it safely and consistently. Quality gaps have been difficult to identify, and poor outcomes have been hard to attribute to the transport process specifically.
What's Been Missing — and Why It Matters
Quality measurement in healthcare uses a framework called the Donabedian model, which divides care into three parts: structure (the resources and systems available), process (what is actually done), and outcomes (what happens to the patient). Applying this to inter-hospital transport requires identifying specific, measurable indicators in each of those three areas.
Prior research had identified pieces of this puzzle, but no one had assembled them into a validated, weighted system that transport teams and hospital administrators could actually use.
Think of it like a checklist for a pilot before takeoff. Every step matters, some steps matter more than others, and without a checklist, critical things get skipped — especially under pressure.
How This Framework Was Built
Researchers in China developed their indicator system using a rigorous expert-consensus method called the Delphi process. In two rounds of consultation, they gathered input from nurses, physicians, and administrators with expertise in emergency medicine, critical care, and inter-hospital transport from institutions across multiple regions.
The response rate among experts was high — 100% in the first round and nearly 96% in the second — reflecting strong engagement with the project. Expert authority scores (a measure of how well-positioned the experts were to judge these questions) were also high, lending confidence to the results.
The final weight assigned to each indicator was determined using a method called Analytic Hierarchy Process (AHP), which uses mathematical comparison to rank indicators by relative importance.
What the Indicators Cover
The resulting framework organizes quality indicators across all three Donabedian dimensions. Structural indicators include things like whether qualified personnel are assigned, whether appropriate equipment is available and functioning, and whether protocols exist for communication between sending and receiving facilities. Process indicators address what happens during the actual transport — monitoring standards, drug management, documentation, and handoff procedures. Outcome indicators track what happens to the patient, including adverse events during transport and condition changes upon arrival.
This framework is a measurement tool, not a treatment — it helps hospitals see where their transport processes fall short, but implementing improvements takes additional work and resources.
What the Experts Agreed On
After two rounds, expert agreement — measured by a statistical tool called Kendall's concordance coefficient — was statistically significant in both rounds, indicating that the panel reached genuine consensus rather than just averaging opinions. The process was designed to surface disagreement as well as agreement, and the drop in suggestion rates between rounds (from 83% in round one to 22% in round two) showed that the framework was converging toward a stable set of indicators.
What This Means for Patients and Families
If you or someone you love ever needs to be transferred between hospitals, this framework is not something you'll interact with directly. But its existence matters. Hospitals that adopt standardized quality indicators can identify where their transport processes are weakest — whether that's equipment readiness, staff training, or handoff communication — and target improvements.
Over time, the use of validated quality indicators like these is associated with better and more consistent care across healthcare systems.
Honest Limitations
This framework was developed in a single country and reflects the expertise and context of Chinese institutions. The structure of emergency transport, equipment availability, and staffing models differ significantly between healthcare systems worldwide. Before this framework can be adopted broadly, it would need to be tested in real transport scenarios and validated for accuracy — meaning: do the indicators actually predict patient outcomes, or just measure process compliance?
The next step is prospective validation — using the indicators in actual inter-hospital transport cases to see whether they detect real problems and whether measuring them leads to measurable improvements. Broader adoption across different healthcare systems would require adaptation for local context, regulatory environments, and resource availability. That work is beginning, but widespread use is still some time away.