| Literature DB >> 34047761 |
Prachi Sanghavi1, J Michael McWilliams2, Aaron L Schwartz3, Alan M Zaslavsky4.
Abstract
Importance: Patient reviews of health care experiences are increasingly used for public reporting and alternative payment models. Critics have argued that this incentivizes physicians to provide more care, including low-value care, undermining efforts to reduce wasteful practices. Objective: To assess associations between rates of low-value service provision to a primary care professional (PCP) patient panel and patients' ratings of their health care experiences. Design, Setting, and Participants: This quality improvement study used Medicare fee-for-service claims from January 1, 2007, to December 31, 2014, for a random 20% sample of beneficiaries to identify beneficiaries for whom each of 8 low-value services could be ordered but would be considered unnecessary. The study also used health care experience reports from independently sampled beneficiaries who responded to the 2010-2015 Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS) Medicare fee-for-service survey. Statistical analysis was performed from January 1, 2019, to December 9, 2020. Main Outcomes and Measures: The main outcomes were health care experience ratings from Medicare beneficiaries who responded to the CAHPS survey from 2 domains, namely "Your Health Care in the Last 6 Months" (overall health care, office wait time, timely access to nonurgent care, and timely access to urgent care) and "Your Personal Doctor" (overall personal physician and a composite score for interactions with personal physician). Beneficiaries in both samples were attributed to the PCP with whom they had the most spending. For each PCP, a composite score of low-value service exposure was constructed using the 20% sample; this score represented the adjusted relative propensity of the PCP patient panel to receive low-value care. The association between low-value service exposure and health care experience ratings reported by the CAHPS respondents in the PCP patient panel was estimated using regression analysis.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2021 PMID: 34047761 PMCID: PMC8261613 DOI: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2021.1974
Source DB: PubMed Journal: JAMA Intern Med ISSN: 2168-6106 Impact factor: 21.873
Definitions and Frequencies of Low-Value Services in the Medicare Fee-for-Service Population
| Low-value service description | Denominator population for which service might be considered low value | Specific procedure and scenario criteria for identifying low-value service receipt | No. (%) | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Population in denominator | Denominator that received service | Population that received service | ||||
| PSA testing in older male patients | Male patients aged ≥75 y with no history of prostate cancer | PSA test | 5 002 928 (13.5) | 2 101 823 (42.0) | 2 101 823 (5.7) | |
| Screening for carotid artery disease in asymptomatic adults | Patients with no history of stroke or TIA prior to index year | Carotid imaging not associated with inpatient or emergency care without a diagnosis of stroke, TIA, or focal neurologic symptoms on claim | 32 257 582 (86.8) | 1 950 920 (6.1) | 1 950 920 (5.3) | |
| Cervical cancer screening for older female patients | Female patients aged ≥65 y with no cervical cancer, dysplasia, diagnoses of other female genital cancers, abnormal Papanicolaou test findings, or human papillomavirus positivity noted in index year’s claims or in prior year’s claims | Screening Papanicolaou test | 17 939 421 (48.3) | 1 456 682 (8.1) | 1 456 682 (3.9) | |
| Parathyroid hormone test for patients with stage 1-3 CKD | Patients with CKD, with no hypercalcemia diagnosis noted in index year’s claims | PTH test with no dialysis service within 30 d after test | 7 765 654 (20.9) | 795 137 (10.2) | 795 137 (2.1) | |
| Total or free T3 level testing for patients with hypothyroidism | Patients with hypothyroidism diagnosis in index year’s claims | Total or free T3 measurement | 4 394 744 (11.8) | 638 415 (14.5) | 638 415 (1.7) | |
| Back imaging for nonspecific low back pain | Patients with no diagnoses for cancer, trauma, intravenous drug abuse, neurologic impairment, endocarditis, septicemia, tuberculosis, osteomyelitis, fever, weight loss, loss of appetite, night sweats, anemia, radiculitis and myelopathy, and no back imaging after 6 wk of first diagnosis of low back pain, in index year’s claims | Back imaging with a diagnosis of low back pain within 6 wk of first diagnosis of low back pain | 36 953 430 (99.4) | 1 499 313 (4.1) | 1 499 313 (4.0) | |
| Head imaging for uncomplicated headache | Patients with no diagnoses for thunderclap headache, epilepsy, giant cell arteritis, head trauma, convulsions, altered mental status, nervous system symptoms (eg, hemiplegia), disturbances of skin sensation, speech problems, stroke or TIA, history of stroke, or cancer in index year’s claims | Brain CT scan or MRI | 36 717 814 (98.8) | 913 839 (2.5) | 913 839 (2.5) | |
| Spinal injection for low back pain | Patients with no diagnoses for radiculopathy in index year’s claims, and no patients with spinal injections within 14 d after an inpatient stay | Outpatient epidural (not indwelling), facet, or trigger point injections with diagnosis for low back pain | 36 379 131 (97.9) | 599 114 (1.7) | 599 114 (1.6) | |
Abbreviations: CKD, chronic kidney disease; CT, computed tomography; MRI, magnetic resonance imaging; PSA, prostate-specific antigen; PTH, parathyroid hormone test; T3, triiodothyronine; TIA, transient ischemic attack.
Percentage of beneficiaries who met the denominator criteria in column 2 among fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries from 2008 to 2014.
Percentage of beneficiaries who received at least 1 provision of the low-value service among those in the denominator for that service.
Percentage of beneficiaries who received at least 1 provision of low-value service among fee-for-service Medicare beneficiaries from 2008 to 2014. This is also the product of columns 4 and 5.
Medicare Fee-for-Service CAHPS Survey Items of Patients' Experiences With Care
| Survey item | Survey question | Original scale |
|---|---|---|
| Overall rating of health care | What number would you use to rate all your health care in the past 6 mo? | 0-10 |
| Appointment waiting time | In the last 6 mo, how often did you see the person you came to see within 15 min of your appointment time? | 1-4 |
| Timely access to nonurgent care | In the last 6 mo, how often did you get an appointment for a checkup or routine care as soon as you needed? | 1-4 |
| Timely access to urgent care | In the past 6 mo, when you needed care right away, how often did you get care as soon as you thought you needed it? | 1-4 |
| Overall rating of personal physician | What number would you use to rate your personal doctor? | 0-10 |
| Clear communication | In the past 6 mo, how often did your personal doctor explain things in a way that was easy to understand? | 1-4 |
| Careful listening | In the past 6 mo, how often did your personal doctor listen carefully to you? | 1-4 |
| Respect | In the past 6 mo, how often did your personal doctor show respect for what you had to say? | 1-4 |
| Sufficient time | In the past 6 mo, how often did your personal doctor spend enough time with you? | 1-4 |
Abbreviation: CAHPS, Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems
All items existed in the 2010-2015 surveys used for this analysis.
All responses were rescaled to a 10-point scale for analysis.
Beneficiary-level composites scores were created for these subquestions by averaging across standardized responses.
Figure 1. Mean Percentage of Beneficiaries Receiving Specific Low-Value Services by Quintile of Low-Value Service Exposure
Mean percentage of low-value service receipt is calculated by first computing, for each primary care professional (PCP) patient panel, the percentage of beneficiaries who received the service among those in the denominator population for that service, and then averaging those percentages across PCP patient panels. The first quintile represents the PCP patient panels with the least low-value care exposure and the fifth quintile represents the PCP patient panels with the most low-value care exposure. PSA indicates prostate-specific antigen; PTH, parathyroid hormone; and T3, triiodothyronine.
Figure 2. Differences Between Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS) Scores at Levels of Low-Value Service Exposure and Overall Mean CAHPS Score
Each CAHPS outcome was separately modeled with a linear regression that adjusted for age, Medicaid-Medicare dual status, highest level of education completed, overall physical health rating, and overall mental or emotional health rating and included physician-clustered SEs. Trend lines are horizontally offset by small amounts (0.8 deciles) for readability. Vertical bars indicate 95% CIs.
Mean Adjusted CAHPS Scores by Low-Value Service Exposure
| Low-value service exposure | Your health care in the last 6 months | Your personal doctor | ||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Overall health care | Waiting time | Timely access to nonurgent care | Timely access to urgent care | Overall personal doctor | Interactions with personal doctor composite | |
| Deciles of low-value service exposure, specified as categorical variable | ||||||
| 1 | 9.160 | 6.540 | 8.594 | 8.933 | 9.471 | 9.545 |
| 2 | 9.153 | 6.504 | 8.560 | 8.936 | 9.446 | 9.513 |
| 3 | 9.155 | 6.526 | 8.596 | 8.934 | 9.459 | 9.522 |
| 4 | 9.152 | 6.482 | 8.572 | 8.943 | 9.482 | 9.545 |
| 5 | 9.157 | 6.466 | 8.571 | 8.953 | 9.481 | 9.523 |
| 6 | 9.150 | 6.467 | 8.570 | 8.953 | 9.489 | 9.535 |
| 7 | 9.155 | 6.384 | 8.559 | 8.956 | 9.495 | 9.547 |
| 8 | 9.155 | 6.371 | 8.590 | 8.948 | 9.497 | 9.537 |
| 9 | 9.135 | 6.263 | 8.582 | 8.991 | 9.488 | 9.507 |
| 10 | 9.125 | 6.092 | 8.581 | 8.963 | 9.470 | 9.493 |
|
| 1.51 | 37.21 | 0.88 | 0.91 | 3.56 | 3.55 |
|
| .14 | <.001 | .54 | .51 | <.001 | <.001 |
| Deciles of low-value service exposure, specified as continuous variable | ||||||
| Low-value service exposure | −0.003 | −0.041 | −0.0002 | 0.005 | 0.003 | −0.003 |
|
| .006 | <.001 | .92 | .02 | .001 | .02 |
Abbreviation: CAHPS, Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems.
Each CAHPS outcome was separately modeled with a linear regression that adjusted for age, Medicaid-Medicare dual status, highest level of education completed, overall health rating, and overall mental or emotional health rating, and included physician-clustered SEs.
Deciles of low-value service exposure were specified as categorical variables and the intercept was dropped to allow direct interpretation of decile coefficients as mean adjusted CAHPS scores (rather than as comparisons with a reference category). F tests were conducted to test the joint significance of the decile coefficients. As an example of interpretation, primary care professional patient panels in the fifth decile of low-value care exposure rated their overall health care 9.157 out of 10, on average, controlling for age, dual status, educational level, and overall health and mental or emotional health rating.
Deciles of low-value service exposure were specified as a continuous variable (integers 1-10). As an example of interpretation, primary care professional patient panels in one higher decile of low-value care exposure rated their overall health care 0.003 points lower (on a 10-point scale), on average, controlling for age, dual status, educational level, and overall health and mental or emotional health rating.