Department of Health Care Policy, Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
Department of Medicine, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Harvard Medical School, Boston, Massachusetts.
JAMA Intern Med. 2019 Jan 1;179(1):16-25. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2018.5086.
Facing new financial incentives to reduce unnecessary spending, health care organizations may attempt to reduce wasteful care by influencing physician practices or selecting more cost-effective physicians. However, physicians' role in determining the use of low-value services has not been well described.
To quantify variation in provision of low-value health care services among primary care physicians and to estimate the proportion of variation attributable to physician characteristics that may be used to predict performance.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: This retrospective analysis included national Medicare fee-for-service claims of 3 159 834 beneficiaries served by 41 773 generalist physicians from January 1, 2008, through December 31, 2013 (data were analyzed in 2016 through 2018). Multilevel modeling was used to estimate the extent of variation in service use across physicians within their region and provider organization, adjusted for patient clinical and sociodemographic characteristics and sampling variation. The proportion of variation attributable to physician characteristics that may be used to predict performance (age, sex, academic degree, professorship, publication record, trial investigation, grant receipt, pharmaceutical or device manufacturer payment, and panel size) was estimated via additional regression analysis.
Annual count per beneficiary of 17 primary care-associated services that provide minimal clinical benefit.
Among the 3 159 834 beneficiaries (58.3% women; mean [SD] age, 73.2 [11.0] years) served by 41 773 physicians (74.9% men; mean [SD] age, 48.0 [10.1] years), the mean annual rate of low-value services was 33.1 services per 100 beneficiaries. Considerable variation across physicians within the same region was found (SD, 8.8 [95% CI, 8.7-8.9]; 90th:10th percentile ratio, 2.03 [95% CI, 2.01-2.06]) and across physicians within the same organization (SD, 6.1 [95% CI, 6.0-6.2]; 90th:10th percentile ratio, 1.61 [95% CI, 1.60-1.63]). The corresponding rates at the 10th percentile of physicians within region and within organization respectively were 21.8 and 25.3 services per 100 beneficiaries. Observable physician characteristics accounted for only 4.4% of physician variation within region and 1.4% of physician variation within organization.
Physician practices may substantially contribute to low-value service use, which is prevalent even among the least wasteful physicians. Because little variation is predicted by measured physician characteristics, direct measures of low-value care provision may aid organizational efforts to encourage high-value practices.
面对新的降低不必要支出的经济激励措施,医疗机构可能会试图通过影响医生的做法或选择更具成本效益的医生来减少浪费性的护理。然而,医生在决定使用低价值服务方面的作用尚未得到很好的描述。
量化初级保健医生提供低价值医疗服务的差异,并估计可能用于预测绩效的医生特征差异的比例。
设计、地点和参与者:本回顾性分析纳入了 2008 年 1 月 1 日至 2013 年 12 月 31 日期间由 41773 名全科医生为 3159834 名受益人的全国性医疗保险按服务收费索赔数据(数据分析于 2016 年至 2018 年进行)。使用多水平模型估计了医生在其所在地区和医疗机构内服务使用的差异,同时调整了患者的临床和社会人口统计学特征以及抽样变化。通过额外的回归分析估计了可能用于预测绩效的医生特征差异的比例(年龄、性别、学位、教授职位、发表记录、试验调查、研究经费获得、制药或器械制造商支付以及专家组规模)。
每位受益人的 17 项初级保健相关服务的年计数,这些服务提供的临床益处极小。
在 3159834 名受益人中(58.3%为女性;平均[SD]年龄,73.2[11.0]岁)由 41773 名医生(74.9%为男性;平均[SD]年龄,48.0[10.1]岁)提供服务,低价值服务的平均年发生率为 33.1 项/100 名受益。发现同一地区内的医生之间存在相当大的差异(SD,8.8[95%CI,8.7-8.9];第 90 百分位与第 10 百分位的比值,2.03[95%CI,2.01-2.06])和同一医疗机构内的医生之间也存在差异(SD,6.1[95%CI,6.0-6.2];第 90 百分位与第 10 百分位的比值,1.61[95%CI,1.60-1.63])。相应的区域内医生和组织内医生的第 10 百分位率分别为每位受益人的 21.8 和 25.3 项服务。可观察到的医生特征仅解释了区域内医生差异的 4.4%和组织内医生差异的 1.4%。
医生的做法可能会极大地导致低价值服务的使用,即使在浪费最少的医生中也是如此。由于可衡量的医生特征预测的差异很小,因此直接衡量低价值护理的提供情况可能有助于组织鼓励高价值实践。