| Literature DB >> 30765399 |
Dong Roman Xu1, Mengyao Hu2, Wenjun He3, Jing Liao1,3, Yiyuan Cai1,3, Sean Sylvia4, Kara Hanson5, Yaolong Chen6, Jay Pan7, Zhongliang Zhou8, Nan Zhang9, Chengxiang Tang10, Xiaohui Wang11, Scott Rozelle12, Hua He13, Hong Wang14, Gary Chan15, Edmundo Roberto Melipillán2, Wei Zhou16, Wenjie Gong17.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Primary healthcare (PHC) serves as the cornerstone for the attainment of universal health coverage (UHC). Efforts to promote UHC should focus on the expansion of access and on healthcare quality. However, robust quality evidence has remained scarce in China. Common quality assessment methods such as chart abstraction, patient rating and clinical vignette use indirect information that may not represent real practice. This study will send standardised patients (SP or healthy person trained to consistently simulate the medical history, physical symptoms and emotional characteristics of a real patient) unannounced to PHC providers to collect quality information and represent real practice. METHODS AND ANALYSIS: 1981 SP-clinician visits will be made to a random sample of PHC providers across seven provinces in China. SP cases will be developed for 10 tracer conditions in PHC. Each case will include a standard script for the SP to use and a quality checklist that the SP will complete after the clinical visit to indicate diagnostic and treatment activities performed by the clinician. Patient-centredness will be assessed according to the Patient Perception of Patient-Centeredness Rating Scale by the SP. SP cases and the checklist will be developed through a standard protocol and assessed for content, face and criterion validity, and test-retest and inter-rater reliability before its full use. Various descriptive analyses will be performed for the survey results, such as a tabulation of quality scores across geographies and provider types. ETHICS AND DISSEMINATION: This study has been reviewed and approved by the Institutional Review Board of the School of Public Health of Sun Yat-sen University (#SYSU 2017-011). Results will be actively disseminated through print and social media, and SP tools will be made available for other researchers. © Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2019. Re-use permitted under CC BY-NC. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.Entities:
Keywords: patient-centered care; quality of primary health care; standardized patients; unannounced standardized patients
Mesh:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30765399 PMCID: PMC6398795 DOI: 10.1136/bmjopen-2018-023997
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMJ Open ISSN: 2044-6055 Impact factor: 2.692
Figure 1Seven selected sample provinces on the map of China with referencing countries of equivalent life expectancy in brackets. The figure is adapted from the paper by Liao et al 29. Permission to use has been obtained.
Figure 2Sampling procedure. PSU, primary sampling unit; SSU, secondary sampling unit; USP, unannounced standardised patient.
Selected candidate conditions
| Conditions | Special focus areas | ||||||||||||
| Chronic disease management | Public health delivery | Mental health | Maternal and childcare | Preventative care | Referral | Patient-centred care | Older adults | Low-value diagnostic | Antibiotics | Process traditional Chinese drug | Injury | ||
| 1 | Common cold (influenza season) | X | X | X | |||||||||
| 2 | Hypertension | X | X | ||||||||||
| 3 | Type 2 diabetes mellitus | X | X | X | X | ||||||||
| 4 | Gastritis | X | |||||||||||
| 5 | Child diarrhoea | X | X | ||||||||||
| 6 | Low back pain (patient requesting low-value test) | X | X | ||||||||||
| 7 | Depression (maternal care) | X | X | X | X | ||||||||
| 8 | Angina (heavy smoker) | X | X | X | X | ||||||||
| 9 | Headache | X | |||||||||||
| 10 | Fall | X | X | X | X | ||||||||
| 11 | Asthma | ||||||||||||
| 12 | Tuberculosis | X | X | X | |||||||||
Variables
| Variable name | Type | Coding | Source | |
| 1. Effectiveness and safety | ||||
| 1.1 | % of recommended questions asked | Continuous | 0–1 | SP checklist |
| 1.2 | % of recommended exams performed | Continuous | 0–1 | SP checklist |
| 1.3 | Diagnosis quality | Ordinal | 0: incorrect, 1: partially correct, 2: correct | SP checklist |
| 1.4 | Treatment quality | Ordinal | 0: incorrect, 1: partially correct, 2: correct | SP checklist |
| 2. Patient-centredness | ||||
| 2.1 | Patient perception of patient-centredness | Continuous | 0–1 | PPPC |
| 2.2 | Choice of provider | Dichotomous | 0: no, 1: yes | SP checklist |
| 2.3 | Ease of navigation in facility | Ordinal | 0: difficult, 1: median, 2: easy | SP rating |
| 3. Timeliness | ||||
| 3.1 | Opening hours | Continuous | Hours | SP checklist |
| 3.2 | Wait time | Continuous | Minutes | SP checklist |
| 3.3 | Consultation time | Continuous | Minutes | SP checklist |
| 4. Efficiency | ||||
| 4.1 | Total cost | Continuous | Renminbi | SP checklist |
| 4.2 | Medication cost | Continuous | Renminbi | SP checklist |
| 4.3 | Laboratory/imaging cost | Continuous | Renminbi | SP checklist |
| 5. Equity | ||||
| 5.1 | To be analysed in a separate cross-over trial | |||
PPPC, Patient Perception of Patient-Centeredness Rating Scale; SP, standardised patient.
Methods of validation for the USP cases
| Domain | Indicator | Data collection | Statistical analysis | |
| Phase | Method | |||
| Content validity | Content Validity Index (CVI) | USP case review | Expert panel review of SP cases, measured by a 4-point Likert scale (1=lowest, 4=highest). | CVI for SP case and for specific USP, where CVI=number of raters giving a rating of 3 or 4 divided by the total number of raters. |
| Face validity | Authenticity of SP role-play | Validation study | Transcripts of the recording of the USP–clinician encounter to be assessed by a member of the project team for accuracy of portraying the clinical case by a 5-point Likert scale (1=100% inaccurate, 5=100% accurate). | Accuracy score=per cent of positive evaluations (ie, evaluation ≥4). |
| Detection ratio | Clinicians receiving an SP visit to complete a ‘detection form’ afterwards to report any suspected USP visits: 0=not suspected; 1=somehow suspected; 2=suspected with certainty). | Detection ratio=number of detected USP visit divided by the total number of USP visits (for case-specific detection ratio and all-case detection ratio, respectively). Detection ratio of 10% and less is considered acceptable. | ||
| Criterion validity | Lin’s concordance correlation coefficient (rc); kappa statistic | Validation study | SP-completed checklist against that by a clinician based on the transcript of the visit (ie, the clinician rating as the ‘reference standard’). | The concordance of the quality scores based on SP-completed checklist against that based on the reference standard. rc used for continuous process quality scores, and kappa for dichotomous diagnoses and treatment and management measures. |
| Test–retest reliability | Lin’s concordance correlation coefficient (rc); kappa statistic | Validation study. | The same SP to score his own recorded encounter in a month. | The concordance to be examined by rc for continuous process quality scores, fees charged (yuan) and time spent (min), and kappa for dichotomous diagnoses and treatment and management measures. |
| Inter-rater reliability | Multiple SPs to complete the checklist for the same recorded transcript. | |||
SP, standardised patient; USP, unannounced standardised patient.