A Bayesian Difference-in-Difference Framework for the Impact of Primary Care Redesign on Diabetes Outcomes

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Abstract

Although national measures of the quality of diabetes care delivery demonstrate improvement, progress has been slow. In 2008, the Minnesota legislature endorsed the patient-centered medical home (PCMH) as the preferred model for primary care redesign. In this work, we investigate the effect of PCMH-related clinic redesign and resources on diabetes outcomes from 2008 to 2012 among Minnesota clinics certified as PCMHs by 2011 by using a Bayesian framework for a continuous difference-in-differences model. Data from the Physician Practice Connections-Research Survey were used to assess a clinic’s maturity in primary care transformation, and diabetes outcomes were obtained from the MN Community Measurement program. These data have several characteristics that must be carefully considered from a modeling perspective, including the inability to match patients over time, the potential for dynamic confounding, and the hierarchical structure of clinics. An ad-hoc analysis suggests a significant correlation between PCMH-related clinic redesign and resources on diabetes outcomes; however, this effect is not detected after properly accounting for different sources of variability and confounding. Supplementary materials for this article are available online.

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Normington, J., Lock, E., Carlin, C., Peterson, K., & Carlin, B. (2019). A Bayesian Difference-in-Difference Framework for the Impact of Primary Care Redesign on Diabetes Outcomes. Statistics and Public Policy, 6(1), 55–66. https://doi.org/10.1080/2330443X.2019.1626310

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