Buist Diana S M, Chang Eva, Handley Matt, Pardee Roy, Gundersen Gabrielle, Cheadle Allen, Reid Robert J
Scientific Investigator at the Group Health Research Institute in Seattle, WA.
Research Public Health Analyst at RTI International in Waltham, MA.
Perm J. 2016 Winter;20(1):41-6. doi: 10.7812/TPP/15-086. Epub 2015 Nov 2.
Perceptions about low-value care (eg, medical tests and procedures that may be unnecessary and/or harmful) among clinicians with capitated salaries are unknown.
Explore clinicians' perceived use of and responsibility for reducing low-value care by focusing on barriers to use, awareness of the Choosing Wisely campaign, and response to reports of peer-comparison resource use and practice patterns.
Electronic, cross-sectional survey, distributed in 2013, to 304 salaried primary care physicians and physician assistants at Group Health Cooperative.
Attitudes, awareness, and barriers of low-value care strategies and initiatives.
A total of 189 clinicians responded (62% response rate). More than 90% believe cost is important to various stakeholders and believe it is fair to ask clinicians to be cost-conscious. Most found peer-comparison resource-use reports useful for understanding practice patterns and prompting peer discussions. Two-thirds of clinicians were aware of the Choosing Wisely campaign; among them, 97% considered it a legitimate information source. Although 88% reported being comfortable discussing low-value care with patients, 80% reported they would order tests or procedures when a patient insisted. As key barriers in reducing low-value care, clinicians identified time constraints (45%), overcoming patient preferences/values (44%), community standards (43%), fear of patients' dissatisfaction (41%), patients' knowledge about the harms of low-value care (38%), and availability of tools to support shared decision making (37%).
Salaried clinicians are aware of rising health care costs and want to be stewards of limited health care resources. Evidence-based initiatives such as the Choosing Wisely campaign may help motivate clinicians to be conscientious stewards of limited health care resources.
对于领取按人头支付薪水的临床医生对低价值医疗(例如可能不必要和/或有害的医学检查和程序)的看法尚不清楚。
通过关注使用障碍、对明智选择运动的认识以及对同行比较资源使用和实践模式报告的反应,探讨临床医生对减少低价值医疗的感知使用情况和责任。
2013年对Group Health Cooperative的304名受薪初级保健医生和医师助理进行电子横断面调查。
低价值医疗策略和举措的态度、认识和障碍。
共有189名临床医生做出回应(回应率为62%)。超过90%的人认为成本对各种利益相关者很重要,并认为要求临床医生具备成本意识是公平的。大多数人发现同行比较资源使用报告有助于理解实践模式并促进同行讨论。三分之二的临床医生知晓明智选择运动;其中,97%的人认为它是一个合理的信息来源。尽管88%的人报告说愿意与患者讨论低价值医疗,但80%的人报告说当患者坚持时他们会开具检查或程序。作为减少低价值医疗的关键障碍,临床医生指出时间限制(45%)、克服患者偏好/价值观(44%)、社区标准(43%)、担心患者不满(41%)、患者对低价值医疗危害的了解(38%)以及支持共同决策的工具可用性(37%)。
受薪临床医生意识到医疗保健成本的上升,并希望成为有限医疗保健资源的管理者。诸如明智选择运动等基于证据的举措可能有助于激励临床医生成为有限医疗保健资源的尽责管理者。