Friday, May 26, 2006

Measuring provider performance using claims data

Consumer-directed healthcare reform models, such as health savings accounts with high deductibles, depend on giving consumers the information they need to select the providers best suited to their needs and pocketbooks. This requires transparency of cost and effectiveness. In addition, such models are designed to rewards providers with incentives for doing good work, such as "pay for performance."

This post is not focused on the debate about whether providers' performance should be evaluated. Rather, it addresses the issue of using insurance claims (administrative) data to evaluate provider effectiveness and improve the quality of care.

Claims data provide some useful measures of clinicians’ performance, including mortality rates, complications, and cost of care. These data are grossly inadequate metrics, however, for incentives, transparency of cost & effectiveness, and continuous quality improvement.

This is because claims data do not include information necessary to determine, for example, how much a patient improved after treatment, if errors were made, if lower cost treatments of equal or greater effectiveness could have been used, if the patient was educated adequately in self-care and complied with the prescribed plan of care, and if coexisting conditions affected results. Without such clinical outcomes data, it isn't possible to evaluate a provider's performance accurately nor gain the knowledge needed to improve healthcare effectiveness and efficiency.

So, instead of using claims data in isolation, they should be augmented with detailed clinical outcomes data that (a) offer more valid measures of performance, and (b) enable researchers to establish and evolve evidence-based practice guidelines.

For an in-depth technical discussion of these issues, see this WellnessWiki page.

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Damn Steve, you spent a lot of time on that report, and made a lot of good points.

There was a little more information than an engineers mind could completely absorb, but from what I did manage to glean, I'm pretty sure I agree with you.

I just think by the time we get to where you and I think we need to be, there won't be any need for doctors or hospitals. We will all have transcended to a higher level in the universe.

Dr. Steve Beller said...

Thanks for your very constructive feedback, Marc!

I will simplify this post and future ones, and put the technical details in links to our wiki.

Steve

Anonymous said...

I had no trouble understanding the post! LOL!

I think P4P is scary, but you made some intriguing points.

Dr. Steve Beller said...

I agree the P4P is fraught with danger, Kim.

The devil is in the details: Not only must incentives be fair to and respectful of providers, but there should be a mechanism by which providers are continually helped to improve care effectiveness and efficiency. Unfortunately, these conditions have not been adequately addressed, imo.