Statistical methods for profiling providers of medical care: Issues and applications
成果类型:
Article
署名作者:
Normand, SLT; Glickman, ME; Gatsonis, CA
署名单位:
Harvard University; Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health; Boston University; Brown University; Brown University
刊物名称:
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN STATISTICAL ASSOCIATION
ISSN/ISSBN:
0162-1459
DOI:
10.2307/2965545
发表日期:
1997
页码:
803-814
关键词:
acute myocardial-infarction
cooperative cardiovascular project
hierarchical logistic-regression
adjusted mortality-rates
hospital characteristics
elderly patients
linear-model
QUALITY
outcomes
surgery
摘要:
Recent public debate on costs and effectiveness of health care in the United Slates has generated a growing emphasis on ''profiling of medical care providers. The process of profiling involves comparing resource use and quality of care among medical providers to a community or a normative standard. This is valuable for targeting quality improvement strategies. For example, hospital profiles may be used to determine whether institutions deviate in important ways in the process of care they deliver. In this article we propose a class of performance indices to profile providers. These indices are based on posterior tail probabilities of relevant model parameters that indicate the degree of poor performance by a provider. We apply our performance indices to profile hospitals on the basis of 30-day mortality rates for a cohort of elderly heart attack patients. The analysis used data from 96 acute care hospitals located in one state and accounted for patient and hospital characteristics using a hierarchical logistic regression model: We used Markov chain Monte Carlo methods to fit the model and to obtain performance indices of interest. In particular, we estimated the posterior probability that mortality at the th hospital is 1-1/2 rimes the median mortality rate over all the hospitals in the state. We also calculated the posterior probability that the deviation in average risk-adjusted and ''standardized'' mortality at the ith hospital is ''large.'' We compare the results of evaluating hospitals based on our performance indices to those obtained using conventional measures. With 30-day risk-adjusted mortality rates ranging from 12% to 14%, one-quarter of the hospitals had posterior probabilities that hospital-specific mortality was 1-1/2 times the median mortality rate greater than 15%. The posterior probability of a large difference between risk-adjusted and standardized mortality rates was less than 6% for three-quarters of the hospitals we examined. Although there were differences in the evaluation of each hospital by the various criteria, one hospital consistently emerged as having the worst performance by all criteria.
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