Eva Stensland MD, PhD National Network of Competence for Medical Quality Registries 08.12.14 How to evaluate quality in medicine.

Slides:



Advertisements
Similar presentations
Pediatric Ambulatory Care
Advertisements

Using Information Technology and Community-based Research to Improve the Dental Health Care System Kathryn A. Atchison, DDS, MPH Professor, Division of.
Dr. Hamda Qotba, M.D,MFPH,FFPH
Donald T. Simeon Caribbean Health Research Council
Introduction to the User’s Guide for Developing a Protocol for Observational Comparative Effectiveness Research Prepared for: Agency for Healthcare Research.
Why Use Episode-of-Care Methodology? Robert A. Greene, MD, FACP Focused Medical Analytics PAI Seminar – Understanding Episodes of Care Chicago, June 22,
Funded by HRSA HIV/AIDS Bureau Selecting an Indicator & Collecting Performance Data Barbara M Rosa, RN-C, MS.
Department of Health and Human Services Measuring Clinical Lab Ordering Quality: Theory and Practice Steven M. Asch MD MPH VA, RAND, UCLA April 29, 2005.
Quality Improvement Methods Greg Randolph, MD, MPH.
Massachusetts Department of Mental Health Elizabeth Childs, MD Commissioner Implications and Next Steps for Massachusetts: Department of Mental Health.
INSTITUTIONAL PHARMACY PRACTICE STANDARDS
Indicators of health and disease frequency measures
Thoughts on Biomarker Discovery and Validation Karla Ballman, Ph.D. Division of Biostatistics October 29, 2007.
Measuring Health Equity: Initial Implementation of Patient Demographic Data Collection.
NHS Highland Quality and Patient Safety Framework
Quality Improvement Prepeared By Dr: Manal Moussa.
Criteria and Standard.
Janice Berry Edwards, PhD, LICSW, LCSW-C, BCD, ACSW
Performance Measurement and Analysis for Health Organizations
Where Results Begin. “We don’t have a health care delivery system in this country. We have an expensive plethora of uncoordinated, unlinked, economically.
Unit 1a: Health Care Quality and HIT Introduction to QI and HIT This material was developed by Johns Hopkins University, funded by the Department of Health.
Joe Selby, MD MPH EBRI December 15, 2011 What Might Patient (Employee)- Centered Research Look Like?
Performance Measurement Orientation To schedule a presentation of “Performance Measurement Orientation” for your organization staff and/or collaborators,
Community Medicine Community Medicine A system of delivery of comprehensive health care to the people by a health team in order to improve the health of.
1 Crossing the Quality Chasm Second Report Committee on Quality of Health Care in America To order:
Education & Training Curriculum on Multiple Chronic Conditions (MCC) Strategies & tools to support health professionals caring for people living with MCC.
Study Designs Afshin Ostovar Bushehr University of Medical Sciences Bushehr, /4/20151.
Summary of ICIUM Chronic Care Track Prepared by: Ricardo Perez-Cuevas Veronika Wirtz David Beran.
SchusterView Graph # 1 OUTLINE FOR TODAY’S TALK Quality of Care: Definitions Who Uses Quality Assessment Information Quality Measurement Methods Challenges.
Introduction: Medical Psychology and Border Areas
TIGER Standards & Interoperability Collaborative
Module 2: Quality and Quality Measures The degree to which health services for individuals and populations increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes.
Pediatric Healthcare Center of The Future Down the Rabbit Hole Of Healthcare September 4, 2007 Gerri Lamb, PhD, RN Emory School of Nursing.
بسم الله الرحمن الرحيم جامعة أم درمان الإسلامية كلية الطب و العلوم الصحية - قسم طب المجتمع مساق البحث العلمي / الدفعة 21 Basics of Clinical Trials.
National Strategy for Quality Improvement in Health Care June 15, 2011 Kana Enomoto Director Office of Policy, Planning, and Innovation.
Creating Equity Dashboards to Monitor Racial, Ethnic and Linguistic Disparities in Health Care: Lessons from the Disparities Leadership Program DiversityRx.
Evaluating Risk Adjustment Models Andy Bindman MD Department of Medicine, Epidemiology and Biostatistics.
nigADvZrM.  Means doing the right thing At the right time (when) In the right way (what) For the right person (to.
Practical Challenges Integrating EBP into Addiction Treatment Programs Dan Kivlahan, Ph.D. VA Puget Sound & University of Washington APA, San Francisco.
UNDERSTANDING AND DEFINING QUALITY Quality Academy – Cohort 6 April 8, 2013.
Performance Measurement & Public Reporting: Consumer Perspective and Principles To schedule a presentation of “Performance Measurement & Public Reporting”
Standard 10: Preventing Falls and Harm from Falls Accrediting Agencies Surveyor Workshop, 13 August 2012.
M eaningful Quality Measures for Children with Behavioral Health Conditions Discussion with the NYS Conference of Local Mental Health Hygiene Directors.
Using Outcomes and other Assessment Tools to Improve Quality Quality Improvement.
Learning Outcomes Discuss current trends and issues in health care and nursing. Describe the essential elements of quality and safety in nursing and their.
EBM --- Journal Reading Presenter :葉麗雯 Date : 2005/10/27.
Erik Augustson, PhD, National Cancer Institute Susan Zbikowski, PhD, Alere Wellbeing Evaluation.
Performance assessment A performance assessment framework is a collation of statistics across a district or within a hospital and is far removed from.
Principles of Assessment and Outcome Measurement for Physical Therapists ksu. edu. sa Dr. taher _ yahoo. com Mohammed TA, Omar,
Introduction to Quality Improvement Maria Isabel Diaz, MD Pediatric Ambulatory Care St. Barnabas Hospital
Screening – a discussion in clinical preventive medicine Galit M Sacajiu MD MPH.
Chapter 5 Population Health Quality and Safety Learning Objectives 1. Explain why it is difficult to monitor healthcare quality and safety at the population.
Healthcare Quality Improvement
EBM --- Journal Reading Presenter :黃美琴 Date : 2005/10/27.
Evidence-Based Mental Health PSYC 377. Structure of the Presentation 1. Describe EBP issues 2. Categorize EBP issues 3. Assess the quality of ‘evidence’
Patient-reported Outcome Functional Status Assessment (PRO FSA) Heart Failure Measure Testing Project 1.
Introduction about Nutritional Assessment methods
Fundamentals of Health Care Improvement
Quality Measurement A Changing Landscape
NHS Education for Scotland
Global burden of diseases
Role of The Physical Therapist in Critical Inquiry
1st International Online BioMedical Conference (IOBMC 2015)
Clinical practice guidelines and Clinical audit
Arif Kamal MD, MBA, MHS Physician Quality Outcomes Officer
QUALITY IMPROVEMENT BASICS
Role of The Physical Therapist in Critical Inquiry
Chapter 10 Quality and Safety
Prevention of Medical Errors Kyle B Riding, PhD, MLS(ASCP)CM Assistant Professor of Medicine University of Central Florida.
Dr. Rasha Salama PhD Community Medicine Suez Canal University Egypt
Presentation transcript:

Eva Stensland MD, PhD National Network of Competence for Medical Quality Registries How to evaluate quality in medicine

Quality in medicine - definition “The degree to which health services for individuals and populations increase the likelihood of desired health outcomes and are consistent with current professional knowledge.” Institute of Medicine. (2001). Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century. Washington D.C.: National Academy Press.

Six elements of quality Safe – avoiding injuries to patients from the care that is supposed to help them. Effective – providing services based on scientific knowledge to all who could benefit and refraining from providing services to those not likely to benefit (avoiding underuse and overuse). Patient-centered – providing care that is respectful of and responsive to individual patient preferences, needs, and values and ensuring that patient values guide all clinical decisions. Timely – reducing waits and sometimes harmful delays for both those who receive and those who give care. Efficient – avoiding waste, in particular waste of equipment, supplies, ideas, and energy. Equitable – providing care that does not vary in quality because of personal characteristics, such as gender, ethnicity, geographic location, and socioeconomic status. Institute of Medicine. (2001). Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century. Washington D.C.: National Academy Press.

Challenges when presenting and evaluating quality in medicine Different groups can have different reasons for measuring quality and hence different measurement criteria and emphasis. Clinicians or those who manage and provide clinical care might be interested in evaluating quality so that they can monitor and improve the services they are providing to individual patients. Regulators might be interested in ensuring that care provided by a hospital/health care organization meets a minimal standard and/or is making credible efforts to improve care quality. Patients/population might be most interested to know if treatment in their local hospital is safe or to get information they can use to choose hospital.

Structure Process (activity) Result/outcome Material resources Human resources Diagnosis Treatment Mortality Morbidity Quality of life Monitoring health care (Donabedian)

Outcome QUALITY Structure Process If quality-of-care criteria based on structural, process, or intermediate outcomes are to be credible, it must be demonstrated that variations in the attribute they measure lead to differences in health status outcomes.

What indicators should we choose? Palmer RH: Int J Qual Health Care 1998;10: Of the structural indicators, measures that predict variations in processes or outcomes of care have the greatest utility Process indicators are especially useful when: - quality improvement is the goal of the measurement process - short time frames are necessary - performance of low volume providers is of interest - and when tools to adjust or stratify for patient factors are lacking. Outcome data are useful if: - long time-frames are possible - performance of whole systems should be studied - or if a high volume of cases are available. Comparisons of process data are easier to interpret and more sensitive to small differences than comparisons of outcomes data. Outcome data are most useful for tracking care given by high-volume providers over long periods of time, and for detecting problems in implementation of processes of care.

Factors determining the outcome Factors that are frequently included in risk adjustment models include: patient demographic psychosocial characteristics (such as age, sex, and functional status) lifestyle factors (smoking, alcohol use) severity of the illness that is the focus for measurement health status co-morbid conditions. Risk adjustment is important before comparing patient outcomes across hospitals or providers. Process indicators (eg. adherence to guidelines) might be more appropriate for comparing quality between hospitals

    

Quality indicators An ideal indicator would have the following key characteristics: (i)indicator is based on agreed definitions, and described exhaustively and exclusively (ii) indicator is highly or optimally specific and sensitive, i.e. it detects few false positives and false negatives (iii) indicator is valid and reliable (iv) indicator discriminates well (v) indicator relates to clearly identifiable events for the user (relevant to clinical practice) (vi) indicator permits useful comparisons (vii) indicator is evidence-based Mainz J Int J Qual Health Care 2003;15:

The use of quality indicators in a quality register RIKS-HIA quality index

Swedeheart: Annual report 2013

OECD: Health Care Quality Indicators

Health at a glance 2013: Case-fatality in adults >45 within 30 days after admission for AMI

Health at a glance 2013

Patient-reported data PROM: patient reported outcome measures PREM: patient reported experience measures (PRI: patient reported incidents) PROMs includes patient reported symptoms, function, health- related quality of life, ratings of health care Patient-reported measures can correlate poorly with physiologic measures. Patients with the same clinical status or physiologic state may have different responses to the condition.

Norwegian Registry for Spine Surgery -Function (Oswestry Disability Index - ODI) range where 0= no disability -Back and leg pain (numerical pain scale - NRS) range 0-10 where 0= no pain -Health-related quality of life (EQ-5D) 0=death and 1= perfect health - Global score of outcome of surgery 7 point scale Lumbar dics herniation: Pain, loss of function and quality of life

Can we define success criteria for lumbar disc surgery? Estimates for substantial amount of change in core outcome measures. Solberg T. Acta Orthopaedica 2013; 84 (2): The cut-off values for success for the mean change scores were 20 (ODI), 2.5 (NRS back), 3.5 (NRS leg), and 0.30 (EQ-5D). The ODI and leg pain scale showed the best ability to discriminate success. Aim: estimate cut-off values for success criteria for the Oswestry disability index, pain scale and HRQL

Summary Part of the complexity in evaluating quality of care is that different groups can have different reasons for measuring quality and hence different views on variables to choose and measurement criteria. Elements of quality: Clinical measures and patient-reported measures assess different aspects of quality

Thank you! Tromsø