| Literature DB >> 26897023 |
Emily E Johnson1, Annie N Simpson2, Jillian B Harvey3, Kit N Simpson4.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Many beneficial health care interventions are either not put into practice or fail to diffuse over time due to complex contextual factors that affect implementation and diffusion. Bariatric surgery is an example of an effective intervention that recently experienced a plateau and decrease in rates, with minimal documented justification for this trend. While there are conceptual models that provide frameworks of general innovation implementation and diffusion, few studies have tested these models with data to measure the relative effects of factors that affect diffusion of specific health care interventions.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 26897023 PMCID: PMC4761154 DOI: 10.1186/s13012-016-0382-x
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Implement Sci ISSN: 1748-5908 Impact factor: 7.327
Fig. 1Conceptual model of surgical diffusion. Legend: 1 expressed as state-wide percentage, 2 expressed as state-wide percentage of 10-year age groups, 3 expressed as percent of surgical patients with private insurance, 4 expressed as household median income, 5 expressed as percent of population with high school degree or lower, 6 expressed as number of new publications per 1,000,000 population, 7 expressed as total number of CMS centers per 1,000,000 population, 8 expressed as percent change of surgeries prior to and after 2006, 9 expressed as cumulative previous rate of surgeries per 100,000, 10 expressed as year of economic recession
Independent variables in study
| Variable name | Definition | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Environmental variables | ||
| Proportion of eligible patients | State-wide percent obesity | BRFSS [ |
| CMS payment policy, NCD | Year prior to National Coverage Decision (NCD) or year post-NCD, a key regulatory legislation of 2006 that limited the eligibility of Medicare patients to specific types of bariatric surgery performed in certified centers of excellence [ | CMS [ |
| Volume of previous surgeries | Cumulative total volume of previous bariatric surgery rates | AHRQ HCUP SID [ |
| Recession | Recession was present in 2001 and December 2007–June 2009 | Bureau of Labor Statistics [ |
| Population characteristics | ||
| Diabetes | State-wide percent diabetes | BRFSS [ |
| Age | State-wide percent in age group 30–39, 40–49, 50–59, 60–69 | US Census Bureau [ |
| Race | State-wide percent black | US Census Bureau [ |
| Ethnicity | State-wide percent Hispanic | US Census Bureau [ |
| Insurance coverage | State-wide percent private insurance | US Census Bureau [ |
| Income | State-wide median family income | US Census Bureau [ |
| Education | State-wide percent high school diploma or lower | US Census Bureau [ |
| Medical practice characteristics | ||
| MD champion | Number of published peer-review journals on bariatric surgery per state | Pub Med Systematic Literature Review |
| Number of CMS centers of excellence (COE) | Number of state-wide CMS centers of excellence | CMS [ |
All percentages/counts in the study were standardized with Census Bureau population estimates for each year and state to account for state population differences
Mean total and percent change bariatric surgery rates per 100,000 population, all states
| Year | Total surgeries mean (SD) | Male surgeries mean (SD) | Female surgeries mean (SD) | % Change total surgeries mean (SD) | % Change male surgeries mean (SD) | % Change female surgeries mean (SD) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2002 | 45.31 (9.03) | 17.19 (3.72) | 71.96 (14.34) | … | … | … |
| 2003 | 71.06 (15.03) | 28.95 (7.31) | 111.76 (23.46) | 59.29 (40.19) | 72.65 (57.84) | 57.50 (37.69) |
| 2004 | 70.58 (12.88) | 28.72 (5.85) | 110.98 (20.16) | 0.58 (13.06) | 0.97 (13.89) | 0.63 (13.55) |
| 2005 | 62.52 (13.70) | 27.06 (6.96) | 96.65 (20.25) | −10.78 (14.60) | −5.66 (14.03) | −12.04 (15.27) |
| 2006 | 58.03 (14.50) | 26.31 (7.42) | 88.56 (21.26) | −7.48 (10.92) | −2.82 (14.11) | −8.59 (10.82) |
| 2007 | 62.06 (18.30) | 28.06 (8.38) | 94.70 (27.80) | 6.69 (15.11) | 7.07 (12.53) | 6.62 (16.53) |
| 2008 | 70.73 (21.60) | 33.88 (9.49) | 106.35 (33.19) | 15.04 (14.39) | 22.76 (18.33) | 13.10 (13.84) |
| 2009 | 71.26 (20.74) | 36.01 (10.58) | 105.12 (30.43) | 1.62 (10.61) | 6.53 (11.53) | 0.009 (11.08) |
| 2010 | 66.68 (18.22) | 33.16 (9.50) | 98.85 (26.86) | −5.44 (9.23) | −7.11 (9.69) | −4.96 (9.70) |
| 2011 | 65.70 (17.69) | 31.70 (9.10) | 98.35 (26.23) | −1.25 (7.94) | −3.74 (12.14) | −0.36 (7.31) |
| 2012 | 67.95 (20.19) | 32.53 (9.25) | 101.78 (30.73) | 5.79 (17.61) | 7.19 (27.67) | 5.58 (15.73) |
| Grand mean (SD) | 64.82 (17.97) | 29.47 (9.28) | 98.79 (26.95) | 6.05 (25.19) | 9.37 (31.53) | 5.40 (24.57) |
Ellipsis signifies rate was not calculated for this year
Explanatory variables of diffusion of bariatric surgery, by category (n = 148)
| Univariate models | Domain models | Final model | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Param. Est. | Param. Est. | Param. Est. | |
| Time | |||
| Intercept | 0.0318 (0.0077)* | 0.3203 (0.1098)* | |
| Year | −0.0047 (.0015)* | ||
| Environment | |||
| Intercept | NA | 0.0532 (0.0296) | |
| Obesity | −0.0017 (0.0008)* | −0.0006 (0.0009) | |
| Medicare NCD | −0.0245 (0.0091) | ||
| Cum. surgery rate | −0.00007 (0.00002)* | −0.00006 (0.00002)* | −0.0001 (0.00004)* |
| Recession year | 0.0099 (0.011) | ||
| Population | |||
| Intercept | NA | 0.2054 (0.0986)* | |
| Age group 50–59 | −0.0098 (0.0031)* | −0.0088 (0.0032)* | −0.0113 (0.0043)* |
| Black | 0.00029 (0.0005) | ||
| Diabetes | −0.0027 (0.0019) | ||
| High school educ. | −0.00004 (0.0007) | ||
| Hispanic | −0.0005 (0.0005) | ||
| Income | −0.0007 (0.0005) | ||
| Private insurance | 0.0009 (0.0004)* | 0.0005 (0.0004) | |
| Medical practice | |||
| Intercept | NA | 0.0208 (0.0066)* | |
| Center of excellence | −0.0058 (0.0029)* | −0.0058 (0.0029)* | 0.0185 (0.0063)* |
| MD champ | −0.0073 (0.0070) | ||
R 2 = 0.1376 (final model)
*p < 0.05