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Can we measure structured chronic care ?. Michel Wensing Jochen Gensichen John Tooker. Contents the workshop. Why measurement is important Patient and provider reports on chronic care Examples from U.S.A, and Europe Discussion on desired research and implications for practice and policy.
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Can we measure structured chronic care ? Michel Wensing Jochen Gensichen John Tooker
Contents the workshop Why measurement is important Patient and provider reports on chronic care Examples from U.S.A, and Europe Discussion on desired research and implications for practice and policy
Why measure chronic care ? To be able to optimize it (formative evaluation and internal improvement) To show its value (summative evaluation for transparancy, contracts, public reporting, P4P) But: is it measurable? Some say that structured chronic care is too complex to be measured
Specific challenges for measurement Chronic care often includes a range of health professionals - certainly from a patient or system perspective Chronic care implies things that may be absent and unknown to patients (and perhaps providers) Measure disease specific or generic aspects of chronic care?
Netherlands: PACIC questionnaire in general practice Validation study in 165 patients from 4 practices Wensing Van Lieshout Jung Hermsen Rosemann
Methods Diabetes patients and COPD patients, randomly sampled from practice registers PACIC (20 items): forward and backward translation, interviews with 15 patients, and adaptations Postal survey with reminders (70% response rate)
Diabetes versus COPD patients Diabetes patients scored higher than COPD patients on 14 of the 20 PACIC items This might be explained by better structured chronic care for diabetes patients, or by patient characteristics
Conclusions • A translated and validated Dutch version of PACIC is available • Reasonably good measurement characteristics, but some problems: • About 25% non responders • Floor and ceiling effects • Unexpected assocation with PEI
Chronic care and physician workload Secondary analysis of EPA data from 140 practices in 10 countries Wensing Van den Hombergh Van Doremalen Grol Szescenyi
Chronic care and physician workload in European primary care Secondary analysis of data from the EPA project
Background Delivery of chronic care is an important task of primary care Primary care practices are relatively small A higher volume of chronic patients may be associated with better performance and higher efficiency Many factors could influence such associations: international research needed
Methods Data from 140 practices in 10 countries (convenience samples) Physician workload = working hours per 1000 yearly attending patients Post-hoc measures based on EPA to measure aspects of the chronic care model Practice size: number of yearly attending patients Non-physician staff: total units of full time equivalance staff in the practice Mixed linear regression analysis models
Main findings Practice size was the single most important predictor of physician workload per 1000 patients: each additional 1000 patients was associated with 1.29 fewer working hours per week per 1000 patients More non-physician staff was associated with higher physician workload: each additional 0.1 fte led to an additional 1.6 physician hours per week per 1000 patients
Conclusions Practice size, not chronic care delivery, was the most important determinant of physician worklload Warning: observational research Physician workload per 1000 patients is a proxy measure for physician efficiency; larger practices are more efficient Involving more nurses in primary does not imply reduced physician workload, and may in fact imply higher workload
Discussion Further research and development Implementation in policy and practice