Literature DB >> 33460075

Development and psychometric assessment of a survey to measure specialty care coordination as experienced by primary care providers.

Varsha G Vimalananda1,2, Mark Meterko3,4, Shirley Qian1, Jolie B Wormwood1,5, Amanda Solch Msw1, Benjamin Graeme Fincke1,4.   

Abstract

OBJECTIVE: To assess the psychometric properties and construct validity of a survey of primary care providers' (PCPs') experience of specialty care coordination, which is a counterpart to our existing survey ("CSC-Specialist") that measures specialists' experience of specialty care coordination. DATA SOURCES: We surveyed PCPs from Veterans Health Administration medical centers and community-based outpatient clinics nationwide (N = 1576) in April 2018. STUDY
DESIGN: We developed candidate items through literature review, existing surveys, PCP interviews, and expert opinion. We used exploratory and confirmatory factor analysis to develop scales and multivariable linear regression to determine their association with PCPs' overall experience of coordination. DATA COLLECTION: The online survey included 23 candidate scale items about specialty care coordination and a single item asking respondents to rate their overall experience of specialty care coordination on a 0-10 scale. All VA PCPs were eligible. We sent survey invitations to PCPs following local Section Chiefs' email introduction (N = 926) and by directly emailing two random samples (N = 400 and N = 6653), overall response rate across the three nonoverlapping samples = 24 percent. PRINCIPAL
FINDINGS: Analyses identified 20 items forming 6 scales with strong psychometric properties and predictive power for overall coordination. Two scales are identical to CSC-Specialist scales: "Communication" (k = 3, α = 0.87) and "Data Transfer" (k = 2, α = 0.92); one is similar: "Relationships and Collaboration" (k = 6, α = 0.90). The three remaining scales address the PCP's unique perspective: "Role Clarity" (k = 3, α = 0.85), "Role Agreement" (k = 3, α = 0.75), and "Making Referrals" (k = 3, α = 0.75). The six scales together explained 67 percent of the variance in PCPs' overall coordination experience with specialists.
CONCLUSIONS: The Coordination of Specialty Care-Primary Care Provider Survey (CSC-PCP) is a novel 20-item survey that can be used in quality improvement or health services research, alone or in combination with the CSC-Specialist, to evaluate coordination of care as experienced by either or both participants. © Health Research and Educational Trust.

Entities:  

Keywords:  consultation; coordinated care; primary care; psychometrics; specialty care; survey research

Mesh:

Year:  2020        PMID: 33460075      PMCID: PMC7518815          DOI: 10.1111/1475-6773.13310

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Serv Res        ISSN: 0017-9124            Impact factor:   3.402


  29 in total

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Authors:  Brian J Hess; Lorna A Lynn; Eric S Holmboe; Rebecca S Lipner
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6.  Physician Consolidation: Rapid Movement From Small To Large Group Practices, 2013-15.

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7.  Staff Perspectives on Primary Care Teams as De Facto "Hubs" for Care Coordination in VA: a Qualitative Study.

Authors:  Tanya T Olmos-Ochoa; Purnima Bharath; David A Ganz; Polly H Noël; Neetu Chawla; Jenny M Barnard; Danielle E Rose; Susan E Stockdale; Alissa Simon; Erin P Finley
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8.  Outpatient consultation: interaction between the general internist and the specialist.

Authors:  J C Byrd; M A Moskowitz
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9.  Coordination of care by primary care practices: strategies, lessons and implications.

Authors:  Ann S O'Malley; Ann Tynan; Genna R Cohen; Nicole Kemper; Matthew M Davis
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10.  Care coordination agreements: barriers, facilitators, and lessons learned.

Authors:  Emily Carrier; Marisa K Dowling; Hoangmai H Pham
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