Welcome to SAM

The Society for Acute Medicine

SAMBA

Registration for SAMBA25 is now open!

Join us for the Society for Acute Medicine Benchmarking Audit 2025 on 19th June 2025.

SAMBA25 will collect information on unit structures, as well as helping us understand how more about your acute medicine workforce.

All users will need to re-register for SAMBA25, through the link below:

Your contact details will be used to contact you for matters related to SAMBA. Users will be registered in batches, prior to the day of data collection.

For Trusts that have more than one hospital, please register each hospital site separately. Please take care to write out the hospital name in full, with no abbreviations.

Please let us know if you wish to be lead for your unit.

If you have any questions, please email samba@acutemedicine.org.uk for more information.

We’ll email all registered participants closer to SAMBA day to ensure you have relevant information.

A Caldicott Approval form will need to be completed for SAMBA25.

Below please find:

The unit questionnaire will be sent to all registered email addresses prior to the 19th June.

Please start arranging your SAMBA25 data collectors for the 19th June 2025 and ensure that your Caldicott Guardian has approved data release. Also, your local audit team should be made aware and approve of SAMBA25 using your usual local permissions. The data entry deadline is 23:59 on 8th August 2025.

Any queries, please let us know at samba@acutemedicine.org.uk

What is SAMBA?

The Society for Acute Medicine (SAM) Benchmarking Audit (SAMBA) is a national benchmark audit of acute medical care. The aim of SAMBA is to describe the severity of illness of acute medical patients presenting to Acute Medicine, the speed of their assessment, their pathway and progress at seven days after admission and to provide a comparison for each participating unit with the national average (or ‘benchmark’).

SAMBA normally takes place at least once a year. Data are collected for patients admitted over a 24hour period, with follow up of clinical outcomes. The first summer audit was undertaken in 30 UK units on 20 June 2012; it has subsequently been repeated on an annual basis in June. In September 2016, a national report was published for the first time.1 The results of SAMBA have been published SAM’s journal, Acute Medicine, and other peer reviewed journals.

The audit is run by SAM. The data collected pertains to:

  • Unit structure and staffing levels
  • SAM’s clinical quality indicators10
  • National guidance or recommendations (e.g. from NICE, NHS England, NHS Improvement)
  • Patient demographics
    • Age
    • Gender
  • Severity of illness at presentation using an early warning score (e.g. NEWS2)
  • Frailty
  • Pathway of care through the hospital

As the title suggests, the audit compares the performance and structure of acute medical services and acute medical units. A national report is then published with the results. Each participating unit receives a bespoke report of their performance against other participating units; to maintain confidentiality, participating units will only be able to access their own data, all other units will be anonymised.

Anonymised data (i.e. hospitals will not be identifiable) will be analysed within the Health Data Research UK Digital Innovation Hub for Acute Care (PIONEER), based at University Hospitals Birmingham NHS Foundation Trust, as agreed by members of SAM council. HRA approval has been granted for this analysis.

We will never release identifiable unit data to a third party, unless required to do so by law. We have never been asked or challenged to release data. Public bodies are obliged to release data under the freedom of information act. We have been advised that an individual patient can ask for access to their data, for example if they were making a complaint or legal challenge regarding their care.

Individual units will not be identified, or their data shared with anyone, without your permission, unless required to do so by law and as per the caveats outlined in the paragraph above. Participating units will be credited in the SAMBA report. The pooled database will be the intellectual property of the Society for Acute Medicine. Participating units are free to share their own data with other organisations. Important findings from the audit may also be written-up for submission to peer reviewed journals and individual units will not be identified.

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SAMBA Reports & Articles

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SAMBA18 National Report

We are pleased to inform you that the SAMBA18 National Report is now available here. SAMBA18 National Report We hope that the report will be of use.  We have included the names of participants who were made known to us.  We would be happy to amend the names of participants if there are any errors…

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SAMBA report 2017

Please find the link to the 2017 report below: Society for Acute Medicine Benchmarking Audit 2017 National Report

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SAMBA 16 National Report 2016

Click the link to see the final report for 2016!