| Literature DB >> 29898468 |
John D D'Amore1,2, Chun Li1, Laura McCrary3, Jonathan M Niloff1, Dean F Sittig4, Allison B McCoy5, Adam Wright6.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Value-based payment for care requires the consistent, objective calculation of care quality. Previous initiatives to calculate ambulatory quality measures have relied on billing data or individual electronic health records (EHRs) to calculate and report performance. New methods for quality measure calculation promoted by federal regulations allow qualified clinical data registries to report quality outcomes based on data aggregated across facilities and EHRs using interoperability standards.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29898468 PMCID: PMC5999523 DOI: 10.1055/s-0038-1656548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Appl Clin Inform ISSN: 1869-0327 Impact factor: 2.342
Fig. 1Quality measure presentation in software application. Quality calculation shown for a fictional patient for calculated measures, with clinical detail shown for a specific measure. Note 1: Tabs along the top show three eligible measures with compliance and three eligible measures with noncompliance. Note 2: The button labeled “Smoking Gun” provides specific clinical detail that substantiates measure eligibility and compliance calculation. Note 3: The clinical detail of the eligible encounter, diagnosis and laboratory result that supports compliance for the selected measure (cms122v5 Diabetic HbA1c < 9%). Copyright and reprinted with permission of Diameter Health, Inc.
Quality measures selected in this research
| CMS identifier | Measure description | Measure type (reason) | Measure steward |
|---|---|---|---|
| 74v6 | Primary caries prevention | Process (preventative) | CMS |
| 82v4 | Maternal depression screening | Process (preventative) | NCQA |
| 122v5 | Diabetes: Poor HbA1c control | Outcome (disease control) | NCQA |
| 123v5 | Diabetes: Annual foot exam | Process (preventative) | NCQA |
| 124v5 | Cervical cancer screening | Process (preventative) | NCQA |
| 125v5 | Breast cancer screening | Process (preventative) | NCQA |
| 127v5 | Pneumonia vaccination of older adults | Process (Preventative) | NCQA |
| 130v5 | Colorectal cancer screening | Process (preventative) | NCQA |
| 131v5 | Diabetes: Annual eye exam | Process (preventative) | NCQA |
| 134v5 | Diabetes: Attention for nephropathy | Outcome (disease control) | NCQA |
| 146v5 | Appropriate testing for children with pharyngitis | Process (utilization) | NCQA |
| 153v5 | Chlamydia screening for women | Process (preventative) | NCQA |
| 154v5 | Appropriate treatment for children with upper respiratory infection | Outcome (utilization) | NCQA |
| 155v5 | Pediatric weight assessment | Process (preventative) | NCQA |
| 156v5 | High risk medication use in elderly | Outcome (patient safety) | NCQA |
| 165v5 | Controlling high blood pressure | Outcome (disease control) | NCQA |
| 166v6 | Use of imaging studies for back pain | Outcome (utilization) | NCQA |
Abbreviations: CMS, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services; NCQA, National Committee for Quality Assurance.
Quality measure calculation before and after iterative improvement
| Calculation before iterative improvement | Calculation after iterative improvement | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| CMS identifier | Measure description | Denominator | Compliance | Denominator(% change) | Compliance(absolute change) |
| 74v6 | Primary caries prevention | 107 | 4.7% | 164 (+53%) | 3.0% (–1.7%) |
| 122v5 | Diabetes: Poor HbA1c control | 20 | 45.0% | 78 (+290%) | 37.2% (–7.8%) |
| 123v5 | Diabetes: Annual foot exam | 20 | 0.0% | 78 (+290%) | 0.0% (NA) |
| 124v5 | Cervical cancer screening | 88 | 0.0% | 182 (+107%) | 7.1% (+7.1%) |
| 125v5 | Breast cancer screening | 64 | 0.0% | 120 (+88%) | 9.2% (+9.2%) |
| 127v5 | Pneumonia vaccination of older adults | 113 | 55.8% | 204 (+81%) | 55.9% (+0.1%) |
| 130v5 | Colorectal cancer screening | 117 | 1.7% | 237 (103%) | 14.3% (+12.6%) |
| 131v5 | Diabetes: Annual eye exam | 20 | 0.0% | 78 (+290%) | 0.0% (NA) |
| 134v5 | Diabetes: Attention for nephropathy | 20 | 35.0% | 78 (+290%) | 69.2% (+34.2%) |
| 146v5 | Appropriate testing for children with pharyngitis | 0 | NA | 50 (NA) | 9.1% (NA) |
| 153v5 | Chlamydia screening for women | 0 | NA | 5 (NA) | 20.0% (NA) |
| 155v5 Rate 1 | Pediatric weight assessment: BMI percentile | 81 | 0.0% | 123 (+52%) | 22.0% (+22%) |
| 155v5 Rate 2 | Pediatric weight assessment: Nutrition counseling | 0.0% | 0.0% (NA) | ||
| 155v5 Rate 3 | Pediatric weight assessment: Activity counseling | 0.0% | 0.0% (NA) | ||
| 156v5Rate 1 | High risk medication use in elderly: 1 medication | 109 | 100% | 196 (+80%) | 98.5% (–1.5%) |
| 156v5Rate 2 | High risk medication use in elderly: 2 or more medications | 100% | 100% (NA) | ||
| 165v5 | Controlling high blood pressure | 44 | 34.1% | 190 (+332%) | 36.4% (+2.3%) |
| Measures not included in iterative improvement | |||||
| 82v4 | Maternal depression screening | 1 | 0.0% | Not available | |
| 154v5 | Appropriate treatment for children with upper respiratory infection | 44 | 100% (73% excluded) | Not available | |
| 166v6 | Use of imaging studies for back pain | 2 | Not available (100% excluded) | Not available | |
Abbreviations: BMI, body mass index; CMS, Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services; NA, not available.
Fig. 2Illustrative example of encounter normalization. This example from a clinical document, edited to protect patient identity, demonstrates how code omission in the XML (highlighted in yellow) would normally exclude this patient from being included in quality measures. Using the text of “office visit” in the reference tag, however, allows a valid code to be selected from appropriate terminology.