| Literature DB >> 27539054 |
Eline F de Vries1, Jeroen N Struijs2, Richard Heijink2, Roy J P Hendrikx3, Caroline A Baan3,2.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Reducing low-value care is a core component of healthcare reforms in many Western countries. A comprehensive and sound set of low-value care measures is needed in order to monitor low-value care use in general and in provider-payer contracts. Our objective was to review the scientific literature on low-value care measurement, aiming to assess the scope and quality of current measures.Entities:
Keywords: Low-value care; Measures; Performance measures; Quality improvement
Mesh:
Year: 2016 PMID: 27539054 PMCID: PMC4990838 DOI: 10.1186/s12913-016-1656-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Health Serv Res ISSN: 1472-6963 Impact factor: 2.655
Level of evidence of low-value care measures
| Level of evidence | Group A: Recommendation source | Measure numbersa | Count |
| 1 | CW, NICE or USPSTF recommendations; | 39, 40, 46 | 3 |
| 2 | CW, NICE or USPSTF recommendations; | 13, 14, 19, 20, 22, 23, 24, 25, 26, 44, 48, 50, 55, 77, 80, 90, 95, 103, 112, 115 | 20 |
| 2 | CW, NICE or USPSTF recommendations; | 33, 53 | 2 |
| 2 | Literature evidence (reviews or clinical trial) | 3, 21, 58, 76, 78, 81, 82, 83, 85, 89 | 10 |
| 2 | Guideline | 54, 57 | 2 |
| 3 | USPSTF concludes that evidence is insufficient | 101 | 1 |
| Unknown | Literature: other compiled low-value service lists | 47, 49, 113 | 3 |
| Unknown | USPSTF recommendation not found | 104, 107 | 2 |
| Unknown | CW, NICE or USPSTF recommendations | 34, 38, 43, 45, 51, 52, 59, 61, 84, 92, 98, 102, 105, 106, 108, 109, 110, 111, 114 | 19 |
| Level of evidence | Group B: Institutional measure status | Measure numbersa | |
| 1 | NQF endorsed | 5, 11, 16, 18, 41, 56, 62–67, 72, 73, 91, 93, 94, 96, 97 | 19 |
| 2 | AHRQ measure supported by a clinical practice guideline or other peer-reviewed synthesis of clinical research evidence and one or more research studies published in a National Library of Medicine (NLM) indexed, peer-reviewed journal | 60, 69, 70 | 3 |
| 2 | AHRQ measure supported by a clinical practice guideline or other peer-reviewed synthesis of the clinical research evidence | 1, 4, 55, 86 | 4 |
| 2 | CMS QualityNet | 2, 7, 8, 9, 27, 28, 29, 30, 31, 32, 37, 42, 99, 100 | 14 |
| 3 | NQF endorsement removed since April 2014 | 6, 10, 74, 75 | 4 |
| Unknown | NQF endorsement not found | 17, 71 | 2 |
| Unknown | AHRQ measure/guideline not found | 68, 79, 87 | 3 |
| Unknown | CMS QualityNet under revision | 15 | 1 |
| Unknown | CMS not found | 12 | 1 |
| Unknown | BCBS AQC measures not found | 35, 36 | 2 |
AHRQ Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, BCBS AQC Blue Cross Blue Shield, The Alternative Quality Contract, CMS Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, CW Choosing Wisely, IOM Institute of Medicine, NICE National Institute for Clinical Excellence (UK): do not do recommendations, NQF National Quality Forum, USPSTF United States Preventive Services Task Force
a: measure numbers are in correspondence with Additional file 2
Fig. 1Flow chart summarizing article selection
General characteristics of the included articles (n = 23)
| First author | Year of publication | Country | Aim | Method | Number retrieved | Recommendation initiative | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Measuresa | Recommendations | ||||||
| AGS Choosing Wisely AGSCW Workgroup [ | 2013 | US | To identify five services that physicians and patients should question. | Review + Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| AGS Choosing Wisely Workgroup [ | 2014 | US | To identify another five services that physicians and patients should question. | Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| Amos [ | 2015 | US | To determine the prevalence of PIMs for older adults in Elimia-Romagna, Italy, using updated Maio criteria. | Empirical analysis | 0 | 16 | Other |
| Bulger [ | 2013 | US | To identify five services that physicians and patients should question. | Review + Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| Chan [ | 2013 | US | To describe and critique the current state of overuse measurement. | Review | 37 | 122 | Other |
| Colla [ | 2015 | US | To develop claims-based algorithms to estimate the prevalence of Choosing Wisely services and to examine the demographic, health and health care system correlates of low-value care at a regional level. | Empirical analysis | 11 | 0 | N.A. |
| Elshaug [ | 2012 | AUS | To develop and apply a novel method for scanning a range of sources to identify existing health care services (excluding pharmaceuticals) that have questionable benefit, and produce a list that warrant further investigation. | Review | 0 | 174 | Other |
| Halpern [ | 2014 | US | To present the Critical Care Societies Collaborative top 5 list in Critical Care Medicine and describe its development. | Review + Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| Hicks [ | 2013 | US | To identify five services that physicians and patients should question. | Review + Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| Kale [ | 2013 | US | The objective of this study was to determine whether the overuse and misuse of health care services in the ambulatory setting has decreased in the past decade. | Empirical analysis | 13 | 0 | N.A. |
| Keyhani [ | 2013 | US | To compare rates of overuse in different health care systems and examine whether certain systems of care or insurers have lower rates of overuse of health care services. | Systematic review | 0 | 7 | Other |
| Korenstein [ | 2012 | US | To perform an extensive search for studies of overuse of therapeutic procedures, diagnostic tests, and medications in the United States and describe the state of the literature. | Extensive search | 0 | 33 | Other |
| Mathias [ | 2012 | US | To characterize performance on imaging-use measures, determine whether performance was consistent across measures, and identify hospital characteristics associated with highest-decile imaging use. | Empirical analysis | 4 | 0 | N.A. |
| Morden [ | 2014 | US | To measure the prevalence and describe the geographic variation of short-interval (repeated in under 2 years) DXAs among Medicare beneficiaries and estimated the cost of this testing and its responsiveness to payment change. | Empirical analysis | 4 | 0 | N.A. |
| Onuoha [ | 2014 | US | To develop a top 5 list of unnecessary medical services in anesthesiology. | Review + Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| Quinonez [ | 2013 | US | To produce top 5 lists. | Review + Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| Rouster-Stevens [ | 2014 | US | To create a pediatric rheumatology Top 5 list as part of the American Board of Internal Medicine Foundation’s Choosing Wisely campaign. | Review + Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| Schuur [ | 2014 | US | To create a top-five list of tests, treatments, and disposition decisions that are of little value, are amenable to standardization, and are actionable by emergency medicine clinicians. | Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| Schwartz [ | 2014 | US | To develop claims-based measures of low-value services, examine service use (and associated spending) detected by these measures in Medicare, and determine whether patterns of use are related across different types of low-value services. | Empirical analysis | 26 | 0 | N.A. |
| Segal [ | 2014 | US | To identify a set of possible indicators of overuse that can be operationalized with claims data and to describe variation in these indicators across the hospital referral regions (HRRs). | Empirical analysis | 20 | 0 | N.A. |
| Wiener [ | 2014 | US | To create a top 5 list. | Review + Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| Williams [ | 2012 | US | To present the final five Choosing Wisely Don’t do recommendations, the rationale for these specific recommendations, and two other recommendations. | Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
| Wood [ | 2013 | US | To report on the CW top 5 list. | Review + Delphi/consensus | 0 | 5 | CW |
AGS American Geriatrics Society, AUS Australia, CW Choosing Wisely, N.A. Not Applicable, PIM Potentially Inappropriate Medications, US United States
aat least a numerator and denominator was specified
Fig. 2Number of low-value care recommendations and measures categorized by the OECD/WHO/Eurostat Classification of Health Care Functions (n = 426)*. Admin.: Administrative; Alternative: Traditional, Complementary and Alternative Medicine; LTC: Long Term Care; Rehab.: Rehabilitative care; *We yielded 115 low-value care measures and 412 recommendations from the literature. Since 101 recommendations had a similar subjects as the measures, we subtracted these from 412 recommendations. That leaves 311 recommendations. Therefore, the total recommendations and measures in figure is 311 + 101 = 426
Validity of the top five published low-value care measures
| Preoperative cardiac tests for non-cardiac low-risk surgery | Antibiotics for upper respiratory tract infections | Imaging for low-back pain | Cervical cancer screening | Imaging for sinusitis diagnosis | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Number of measures included in review a | 4 (measure no.: 42–44, 48) | 7 (measure no.: 57–59, 62, 63, 65, 66) | 8 (measure no.: 2–9) | 3 (measure no.: 110–112) | 4 (measure no.: 33, 35, 36, 59) |
| Measure criteria b | |||||
| Face validity c | Yes: level of evidence is 2 | Yes, level of evidence is 1 | Yes, level of evidence is 1 | Yes, level of evidence is 2 | Yes, level of evidence is 2 |
| Coding/criterion validity | Not found | Not found | Not found | Not found | Not found |
| Construct validity | Not found | Not found | Not found | Not found | Not found |
| Used in practice | Yes, for payment determination (Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting) [ | Yes, in Physician Quality Reporting System [ | Yes, for payment determination (Hospital Outpatient Quality Reporting) [ | Yes, in Physician Quality Reporting System [ | Not found |
a: Measure numbers corresponding with Additional file 2 between brackets
b: Criteria for quality measures (AHRQ)
c: For level of evidence also see Table 2