Chen Catherine L, Lin Grace A, Bardach Naomi S, Clay Theodore H, Boscardin W John, Gelb Adrian W, Maze Mervyn, Gropper Michael A, Dudley R Adams
From the Departments of Anesthesia and Perioperative Care (C.L.C., A.W.G., M.M., M.A.G.), Pediatrics (N.S.B.), and Medicine and Epidemiology and Biostatistics (W.J.B., R.A.D.), Center for Healthcare Value (C.L.C., G.A.L., N.S.B., R.A.D.), Division of General Internal Medicine (G.A.L.), and Philip R. Lee Institute for Health Policy Studies (G.A.L., R.A.D.), University of California, San Francisco, San Francisco; and Clay Software and Statistics, Ashland, OR (T.H.C.).
N Engl J Med. 2015 Apr 16;372(16):1530-8. doi: 10.1056/NEJMsa1410846.
Routine preoperative testing is not recommended for patients undergoing cataract surgery, because testing neither decreases adverse events nor improves outcomes. We sought to assess adherence to this guideline, estimate expenditures from potentially unnecessary testing, and identify patient and health care system characteristics associated with potentially unnecessary testing.
Using an observational cohort of Medicare beneficiaries undergoing cataract surgery in 2011, we determined the prevalence and cost of preoperative testing in the month before surgery. We compared the prevalence of preoperative testing and office visits with the mean percentage of beneficiaries who underwent tests and had office visits during the preceding 11 months. Using multivariate hierarchical analyses, we examined the relationship between preoperative testing and characteristics of patients, health system characteristics, surgical setting, care team, and occurrence of a preoperative office visit.
Of 440,857 patients, 53% had at least one preoperative test in the month before surgery. Expenditures on testing during that month were $4.8 million higher and expenditures on office visits $12.4 million higher (42% and 78% higher, respectively) than the mean monthly expenditures during the preceding 11 months. Testing varied widely among ophthalmologists; 36% of ophthalmologists ordered preoperative tests for more than 75% of their patients. A patient's probability of undergoing testing was associated mainly with the ophthalmologist who managed the preoperative evaluation.
Preoperative testing before cataract surgery occurred frequently and was more strongly associated with provider practice patterns than with patient characteristics. (Funded by the Foundation for Anesthesia Education and Research and the Grove Foundation.).
不建议对接受白内障手术的患者进行常规术前检查,因为检查既不能减少不良事件,也不能改善手术效果。我们试图评估对该指南的遵循情况,估计潜在不必要检查的费用,并确定与潜在不必要检查相关的患者和医疗保健系统特征。
利用2011年接受白内障手术的医疗保险受益人的观察性队列,我们确定了手术前一个月内术前检查的患病率和费用。我们将术前检查和门诊就诊的患病率与前11个月接受检查和门诊就诊的受益人平均百分比进行了比较。使用多变量分层分析,我们研究了术前检查与患者特征、卫生系统特征、手术环境、护理团队以及术前门诊就诊发生率之间的关系。
在440,857名患者中,53%在手术前一个月至少进行了一项术前检查。该月的检查费用比前11个月的平均月费用高出480万美元,门诊就诊费用高出1240万美元(分别高出42%和78%)。不同眼科医生的检查差异很大;36%的眼科医生为超过75%的患者开具术前检查。患者接受检查的可能性主要与负责术前评估的眼科医生有关。
白内障手术前的术前检查频繁发生,与医疗服务提供者的执业模式的关联比与患者特征的关联更强。(由麻醉教育与研究基金会和格罗夫基金会资助。)