Methods for improving efficiency in quality measurement: The example of pain screening

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Abstract

Objective: Collecting unnecessary data when assessing quality of care wastes valuable resources. We evaluated three approaches for estimating quality-measure adherence and determined minimum visit data required to achieve accurate estimates. Design: We abstracted medical records for calculating physician-level pain screening rates as: visit-specific, using single-visit data for each patient; visit-level average, using data for all patients and visits; and patient-level average, using data from a subset of patients and visits. Setting: VA Greater Los Angeles Health-care System, 2006. Participants: One hundred and six patients with Stage IV solid tumors. Intervention: Pain screening at every medical encounter, measured by a 0-10 numeric rating scale and reported to the national Medicare insurance program under a 'pay-for-reporting' program. Main Outcome Measures: Amount of visit data needed to reach the smallest 95% confidence interval (CI) and stable pain screening estimates. Results: Pain screening occurred at 22% (23/106; 95% CI: 14-30%) of initial visits and 50% (8/16; 95% CI: 25-75%) of single visits. Across all visits, screening adherence averaged 34% when estimated at the visit-level precision and 30% at the patient level. Maximum patient-level precision was reached at visit 4 (95% CI: +8%) and visit level at visit 14 (95% CI: +6%). Using patient-level and visit-level approaches, estimates stabilized at visits 8 and 11, respectively, and reached within 1 percentage point of the steady-state value at visits 4 and 9. Conclusion: To address low-pain screening among cancer patients, an oncology pain screening measure may be most efficiently evaluated with data from a sample of patients and visits. This approach may be valid for visit-level quality measures in other settings. © The Author 2011. Published by Oxford University Press in association with the International Society for Quality in Health Care; all rights reserved.

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APA

Bentley, T. G. K., Malin, J., Longino, S., Asch, S., Dy, S., & Lorenz, K. A. (2011). Methods for improving efficiency in quality measurement: The example of pain screening. International Journal for Quality in Health Care, 23(6), 657–663. https://doi.org/10.1093/intqhc/mzr054

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