Swankoski Kaylyn E, Peikes Deborah N, Dale Stacy B, Clusen Nancy A, Morrison Nikkilyn, Holland John J, Day Timothy J, Brown Randall S
Mathematica Policy Research, PO Box 2393, Princeton, NJ 08543. E-mail:
Am J Manag Care. 2017 Mar;23(3):178-184.
To determine how the multipayer Comprehensive Primary Care (CPC) initiative that transforms primary care delivery affects the patient experience of Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries. The study examines how experience changed between the first and second years of CPC, how ratings of CPC practices have changed relative to ratings of comparison practices, and areas in which practices still have opportunities to improve patient experience.
Prospective study using 2 serial cross-sectional samples of more than 25,000 Medicare fee-for-service beneficiaries attributed to 496 CPC practices and nearly 9000 beneficiaries attributed to 792 comparison practices.
We analyzed patient experience 8 to 12 months and 21 to 24 months after CPC began, measured using 6 domains of the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems Clinician and Group 12-Month Survey with Patient-Centered Medical Home supplemental items. We compared changes over time in patients giving the best responses between CPC and comparison practices using a regression-adjusted difference-in-differences analysis.
Patient ratings of care over time were generally comparable for CPC and comparison practices, with slightly more favorable differences-generally of small magnitude-for CPC practices than expected by chance. There were small, statistically significant, favorable effects for 2 of 6 composite measures measured using both the proportion giving the best responses and mean responses: getting timely appointments, care, and information; providers support patients in taking care of their own health; and providers discuss medication decisions. There was an additional small favorable effect on the proportion of patients giving the best response in getting timely appointments, care, and information; there was no effect on the mean.
During the first 2 years of CPC, CPC practices showed slightly better year-to-year patient experience ratings for selected items, indicating that transformation did not negatively affect patient experience and improved some aspects slightly. Patient ratings for the 2 groups were generally comparable, and both faced substantial room for improvement.
确定转变初级医疗服务的多支付方综合初级医疗(CPC)计划如何影响医疗保险按服务付费受益人的患者体验。该研究考察了CPC实施的第一年和第二年之间体验的变化情况、CPC机构相对于对照机构的评分变化情况,以及这些机构在改善患者体验方面仍存在机会的领域。
前瞻性研究,使用了两个连续的横断面样本,超过25000名医疗保险按服务付费受益人被分配到496个CPC机构,近9000名受益人被分配到792个对照机构。
我们在CPC开始后的8至12个月以及21至24个月分析患者体验,使用医疗服务提供者和系统消费者评估临床医生和团体12个月调查中的6个领域以及以患者为中心的医疗之家补充项目进行测量。我们使用回归调整的差异分析比较了CPC机构和对照机构中给出最佳回答的患者随时间的变化情况。
随着时间推移,CPC机构和对照机构的患者护理评分总体相当,CPC机构的有利差异略多——通常幅度较小——比随机预期的情况更有利。在使用给出最佳回答的比例和平均回答测量的6项综合指标中的2项上有小的、具有统计学意义的有利影响:获得及时的预约、护理和信息;提供者支持患者自我护理;以及提供者讨论用药决策。在获得及时预约、护理和信息方面给出最佳回答的患者比例上还有一个额外的小有利影响;对平均值没有影响。
在CPC实施的头两年,CPC机构在选定项目上的逐年患者体验评分略好,表明这种转变没有对患者体验产生负面影响,并且在某些方面略有改善。两组的患者评分总体相当,并且都有很大的改进空间。