Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To provide a description and application of a novel methodology for comparing actual to expected visit rates at the physician level (controlling for patient characteristics) that could be employed in healthcare monitoring and management. DATA SOURCES/STUDY SETTING: Two fiscal years (1997/1998 and 1998/1999) of health utilization data extracted from linked administrative data sets on a population-based cohort of 13,688 patients (aged 25+ with hypertension) involving 157 physicians. STUDY DESIGN: We re-analyzed data from a previously published retrospective cohort study to develop and apply a new methodology for identifying higher or lower than expected physician visit rates for hypertension. DATA COLLECTION/EXTRACTION METHODS: We matched each study physician's hypertensive patients on the basis of age, sex, income and co-morbidity to an equal number of control patients drawn from the cohort. We then compared visit rates between the actual practice and the matched control practice. PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Although the correlation between the visit rates of the two groups of practices was high (r=.87), there were notable differences in rates, suggesting substantial discretionary practice among physicians. CONCLUSIONS: The methodology outlined in this paper provides a basis for identifying variations in visit levels related to discretionary practice patterns and patient preferences. Deviation from expected visit rates provides a potentially useful measure for performance feedback and quality improvement activities.
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CITATION STYLE
Frohlich, N., Cree, M., & Carriere, K. C. (2008). A General Method for Identifying Excess Revisit Rates: The Case of Hypertension. Healthcare Policy | Politiques de Santé, 3(3), 40–48. https://doi.org/10.12927/hcpol.2008.19572
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