Brown Celia, Lilford Richard
Department of Public Health and Epidemiology, The University of Birmingham, Edgbaston, Birmingham B15 2TT.
BMC Health Serv Res. 2006 Jun 28;6:81. doi: 10.1186/1472-6963-6-81.
The performance of Primary Care Trusts in England is assessed and published using a number of different performance indicators. Our study has two broad purposes. Firstly, to find out whether pairs of indicators that purport to measure similar aspects of quality are correlated (as would be expected if they are both valid measures of the same construct). Secondly, we wanted to find out whether broad (global) indicators correlated with any particular features of Primary Care Trusts, such as expenditure per capita.
Cross sectional quantitative analysis using data from six 2004/05 PCT performance indicators for 303 English Primary Care Trusts from four sources in the public domain: Star Rating, aggregated Quality and Outcomes Framework scores, Dr Foster mortality index, Dr Foster equity index (heart by-pass and hip replacements), NHS Litigation Authority Risk Management standards and Patient Satisfaction scores from the Star Ratings. Forward stepwise multiple regression analysis to determine the effect of Primary Care Trust characteristics on performance.
Star Rating and Quality and Outcomes Framework total, both summary measures of global quality, were not correlated with each other (F = 0.66, p = 0.57). There were however positive correlations between Quality and Outcomes Framework total and patient satisfaction (r = 0.61, p < 0.001) and between screening/'additional services' indicators on the Star Ratings and Quality and Outcomes Framework (F = 24, p < 0.001). There was no correlation between different measures of access to services. Likewise we found no relationship between either Star Rating or Litigation Authority Standards and hospital mortality (F = 0.61, p = 0.61; F = 0.31, p = 0.73).
Performance assessment in healthcare remains on the Government's agenda, with new core and developmental standards set to replace the Star Ratings in 2006. Yet the results of this analysis provide little evidence that the current indicators have sufficient construct validity to measure the underlying concept of quality, except when the specific area of screening is considered.
英格兰初级保健信托机构的绩效通过一系列不同的绩效指标进行评估和公布。我们的研究有两个主要目的。其一,探究旨在衡量质量相似方面的成对指标是否相关(如果它们都是对同一结构的有效衡量指标,情况应如此)。其二,我们想了解宽泛的(整体)指标是否与初级保健信托机构的任何特定特征相关,比如人均支出。
采用横断面定量分析方法,数据来自2004/05年度六个针对303个英格兰初级保健信托机构的绩效指标,数据来源为公共领域的四个方面:星级评定、综合质量与结果框架得分、福斯特死亡率指数、福斯特公平指数(心脏搭桥和髋关节置换手术)、国民医疗服务诉讼管理局风险管理标准以及星级评定中的患者满意度得分。采用向前逐步多元回归分析来确定初级保健信托机构特征对绩效的影响。
星级评定和质量与结果框架总分这两个整体质量的汇总指标彼此不相关(F = 0.66,p = 0.57)。然而,质量与结果框架总分与患者满意度之间存在正相关(r = 0.61,p < 0.001),星级评定中的筛查/“额外服务”指标与质量与结果框架之间也存在正相关(F = 24,p < 0.001)。不同服务可及性衡量指标之间不存在相关性。同样,我们发现星级评定或诉讼管理局标准与医院死亡率之间均无关联(F = 0.61,p = 0.61;F = 0.31,p = 0.73)。
医疗保健领域的绩效评估仍在政府议程之上,新的核心标准和发展标准将于2006年取代星级评定。然而,本分析结果几乎没有提供证据表明当前指标具有足够的结构效度来衡量质量的潜在概念,除非考虑筛查这一特定领域。