Literature DB >> 32934120

Evaluating Quality of Care for Rheumatoid Arthritis for the Population of Alberta Using System-level Performance Measures.

Claire E H Barber1, Diane Lacaille2, Peter Faris3, Dianne Mosher4, Steven Katz5, Jatin N Patel6, Sharon Zhang3, Karen Yee3, Cheryl Barnabe7, Glen S Hazlewood7, Vivian Bykerk8, Natalie J Shiff9, Marinka Twilt10, Jennifer Burt11, Susanne M Benseler10, Joanne Homik5, Deborah A Marshall7.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: We evaluated 4 national rheumatoid arthritis (RA) system-level performance measures (PM) in Alberta, Canada.
METHODS: Incident and prevalent RA cases ≥ 16 years of age since 2002 were identified using a validated case definition applied in provincial administrative data. Performance was ascertained through analysis of health data between fiscal years 2012/13-2015/16. Measures evaluated were as follows: proportion of incident RA cases with a rheumatologist visit within 1 year of first RA diagnosis code (PM1); proportion of prevalent RA patients who were dispensed a disease-modifying antirheumatic drug (DMARD) annually (PM2); time from first visit with an RA code to DMARD dispensation and proportion of incident cases where the 14-day benchmark for dispensation was met (PM3); and proportion of patients seen in annual follow-up (PM4).
RESULTS: There were 31,566 prevalent and 2730 incident RA cases (2012/13). Over the analysis period, the proportion of patients seen by a rheumatologist within 1 year of onset (PM1) increased from 55% to 63%; however, the proportion of RA patients dispensed DMARD annually (PM2) remained low at 43%. While the median time to DMARD from first visit date in people who received DMARD improved over time from 39 days to 28 days, only 38-41% of patients received treatment within the 14-day benchmark (PM3). The percentage of patients seen in yearly follow-up (PM4) varied between 73-80%.
CONCLUSION: The existing Alberta healthcare system for RA is suboptimal, indicating barriers to accessing specialty care and treatment. Our results inform quality improvement initiatives required within the province to meet national standards of care.
Copyright © 2021 by the Journal of Rheumatology.

Entities:  

Keywords:  access; quality improvement; quality indicator

Year:  2020        PMID: 32934120     DOI: 10.3899/jrheum.200420

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Rheumatol        ISSN: 0315-162X            Impact factor:   4.666


  2 in total

1.  A Population-Based Study Evaluating Retention in Rheumatology Care Among Patients With Rheumatoid Arthritis.

Authors:  Claire E H Barber; Diane Lacaille; Ruth Croxford; Cheryl Barnabe; Deborah A Marshall; Michal Abrahamowicz; Hui Xie; J Antonio Avina-Zubieta; John M Esdaile; Glen Hazlewood; Peter Faris; Steven Katz; Paul MacMullan; Dianne Mosher; Jessica Widdifield
Journal:  ACR Open Rheumatol       Date:  2022-05-05

2.  Evaluation of Rheumatology Workforce Supply Changes in Ontario, Canada, from 2000 to 2030.

Authors:  Jessica Widdifield; Sasha Bernatsky; Janet E Pope; Bindee Kuriya; Claire E H Barber; Lihi Eder; Vandana Ahluwalia; Vicki Ling; Peter Gozdyra; Catherine Hofstetter; Anne Lyddiatt; J Michael Paterson; Carter Thorne
Journal:  Healthc Policy       Date:  2021-02
  2 in total

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