| Literature DB >> 30223551 |
Oliver Hirsch1, Norbert Donner-Banzhoff2, Maike Schulz3, Michael Erhart4.
Abstract
When prescribing a drug for a patient, a physician also has to consider economic aspects. We were interested in the feasibility and validity of profiling based on funnel plots and mixed effect models for the surveillance of German ambulatory care physicians' prescribing. We analyzed prescriptions issued to patients with a health insurance card attending neurologists' and psychiatrists' ambulatory practices in the German federal state of Saarland. The German National Association of Statutory Health Insurance Physicians developed a prescribing assessment scheme (PAS) which contains a systematic appraisal of the benefit of drugs for so far 12 different indications. The drugs have been classified on the basis of their clinical evidence as "standard", "reserve" or "third level" medication. We had 152.583 prescriptions in 56 practices available for analysis. A total of 38.796 patients received these prescriptions. The funnel plot approach with additive correction for overdispersion was almost equivalent to a mixed effects model which directly took the multilevel structure of the data into account. In the first case three practices were labeled as outliers, the mixed effects model resulted in two outliers. We suggest that both techniques should be routinely applied within a surveillance system of prescription claims data.Entities:
Keywords: ambulatory care; drug prescriptions; reference standards; statistical data interpretation
Mesh:
Year: 2018 PMID: 30223551 PMCID: PMC6163340 DOI: 10.3390/ijerph15092015
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Int J Environ Res Public Health ISSN: 1660-4601 Impact factor: 3.390
Figure 1Number of prescriptions by neurologists and psychiatrists in the German federal state of Saarland plotted against the proportion of medication with third level. Practices are units of observation. Control limits were calculated according to Ieva and Paganoni and Spiegelhalter [8,23]. The solid horizontal line represents Huber’s M estimator, a robust substitute for the mean.
Figure 2Standardized ratio of third level medication against expected number of third level medication in neurologists and psychiatrists in the German federal state of Saarland. Adjusted funnel plot with band limits at 95% (blue lines) and 98% (red lines).
Figure 3Standardized ratio of third level medication in neurologists and psychiatrists in the German federal state of Saarland. Additive adjusted funnel plot with band limits at 95% (blue lines) and 98% (red lines).
Figure 4Boxplot of the point estimates of the random intercept of the multilevel model. The horizontal blue lines correspond to the quantiles of 2.5% and 97.5%. The horizontal red lines correspond to the quantiles of 1% and 99%.
Figure 5Normal Q-Q plot of the point estimates of the random intercept of the multilevel model to visualize outliers.