| Literature DB >> 16595002 |
Judith K Zemencuk1, Timothy P Hofer, Rodney A Hayward, Richard H Moseley, Sanjay Saint.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: 2002 marked the first time that the rate of hospital spending in the United States out-paced the overall health care spending rate of growth since 1991. As hospital spending continues to grow and as reimbursement for hospital expenses has moved towards the prospective payment system, there is still increasing pressure to reduce costs. Hospitals have a major incentive to decrease resource utilization, including hospital length of stay. We evaluated whether physician profiling affects physician satisfaction and hospital length of stay, and assessed physicians' views concerning hospital cost containment and the quality of care they provide.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2006 PMID: 16595002 PMCID: PMC1481613 DOI: 10.1186/1472-6963-6-45
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Physician Characteristics (N = 142)
| Mean years since graduation from medical school (s.d.) | 19.4 (9.2) | 17.9 (8.5) |
| Mean years attending at the VA Medical Center (s.d) | 7.1 (6.6) | 7.8 (7.0) |
| Female, % (n) | 33 (12) | 37 (13) |
| Specialty:< % (n) | ||
| General internal medicine | 36.1 (13) | 40 (14) |
| Internal medicine subspecialty | 63.9 (23) | 60 (21) |
| Subspecialty (total may differ from sum due to rounding error): | ||
| Endocrinology | 7.9 (3) | 5.6 (2) |
| Geriatrics | 18.4 (7) | 16.7 (6) |
| Hypertension | 0.0 (0) | 2.8 (1) |
| Infectious diseases | 10.5 (4) | 13.9 (5) |
| Nephrology | 2.6 (1) | 0.0 (0) |
| Nuclear medicine | 7.9 (3) | 2.8 (1) |
| Pulmonary critical care | 2.6 (1) | 0.0 (0) |
| Rheumatology | 10.5 (4) | 11.1 (4) |
| None | 36.8 (14) | 44.4 (16) |
| Senior Resident Physicians (n = 68) | ||
| Mean years since graduation from medical school(s.d.) | 3.6 (1.8) | 3.2 (1.1) |
| Female :< % (n) | 47.2 (17) | 35.5 (11) |
| Work pursuing after residency: :< % (n) | ||
| Primarily outpatient-based general internal medicine | 25.0 (9) | 12.9 (4) |
| Primarily inpatient-based general internal medicine | 8.3 (3) | 6.5 (2) |
| Subspecialty fellowship | 66.7 (24) | 80.6 (25) |
* None of the differences between pre-profiling and profiling period physicians were statistically significant.
Physician Survey Responses (N = 142)
| "I greatly enjoyed my most recent ward month" | 34 (89) | 32 (89) | 31 (84) | 25 (81) |
| "I was very involved in the day-to-day care of the patients on my service." | 34 (89) | 30 (83) | ||
| "My attending was very involved in all important patient care decisions." | 23 (62) | 12 (39) | ||
| "I allowed my residents considerable autonomy in patient care decisions." | 38 (100) | 35 (97) | ||
| "My attending allowed me considerable autonomy in making patient care decisions." | 32 (86) | 29 (94) | ||
| "My ward team provided extremely high quality care to our patients." | 37 (97) | 33 (92) | ||
| "I provided extremely high quality care to my patients." | 33 (89) | 28 (90) | ||
| "How do you think | ||||
| Positive | 11 (29) | 6 (17) | ||
| Indifferent | 10 (26) | 20 (56) | ||
| Negative | 17 (45) | 10 (28)* | ||
| "In general, being 'profiled' will cause most physicians to discharge some patients earlier than they would have normally." | 13 (34) | 3 (8)* | ||
| "In general, being 'profiled' will cause most physicians to decrease the ordering of some tests and/or procedures." | 17 (46) | 5 (14)* | ||
| Reported that they tried "to become more involved than usual in the care of the patients on [their] service during their profiling month. | 16 (46) | |||
| Agreed that "being 'profiled' caused me to discharge some patients earlier than I would have normally." | 0 (0) | |||
| Agreed that "I sometimes felt pressured to discharge a patient from the hospital prematurely." | 2 (6) | |||
| "Did you try to decrease your patients' lengths' of stay?" Responded "Yes:" | 5 (14) | |||
| Agreed that "being 'profiled' caused me to decrease the ordering of some tests and/or procedures." | 0 (0) | |||
| Agreed that "I sometimes felt pressured not to use certain ancillary tests/services." | 0 (0) | |||
| "Did you try to decrease ordering of tests and procedures?" Responded "Yes:" | 4 (11) |
*p <.05 for differences between physician groups