Hong Arthur S, Ross-Degnan Dennis, Zhang Fang, Wharam J Frank
Department of Internal Medicine, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas.
Department of Clinical Science, University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center, Dallas.
JAMA Intern Med. 2017 Nov 1;177(11):1577-1585. doi: 10.1001/jamainternmed.2017.4888.
Clinicians who order unnecessary radiographic imaging may cause financial harm to patients who have increasing levels of cost sharing. Clinician predictors of low-value imaging are largely unknown.
To characterize clinician predictors of low-value imaging for acute uncomplicated back pain and headache, including clinicians who saw both conditions.
DESIGN, SETTING, AND PARTICIPANTS: Multivariate logistic regression modeling of imaging rates after acute uncomplicated back pain and headache visits as indicated by January 2010 to December 2014 commercial insurance claims and demographic data from a large US health insurer. Participants included 100 977 clinicians (primary care physicians, specialist physicians, and chiropractors).
Imaging after acute uncomplicated back pain and headache visits was recorded. We identified whether the clinician's prior patient received imaging, whether the clinician was an owner of imaging equipment, and the varying impact by clinician specialty. We then used high rates of low-value back imaging as a predictor for low-value headache imaging.
Clinicians conducted 1 007 392 visits for 878 720 adults ages 18 to 64 years with acute uncomplicated back pain; 52 876 primary care physicians conducted visits for 492 805 adults ages 18 to 64 years with acute uncomplicated headache; 34 190 primary care clinicians conducted 405 721 visits for 344 991 adults ages 18 to 64 years with headache and had also conducted at least 4 visits from patients with back pain. If a primary care physician's prior patient received low-value back imaging, the patient had 1.81 higher odds of low-value imaging (95% CI, 1.77-1.85). This practice effect was larger for chiropractors (odds ratio [OR], 2.80; 95% CI, 2.74-2.86) and specialists (OR, 2.98; 95% CI, 2.88-3.07). For headache, a prior low-value head image predicted 2.00 higher odds of a subsequent head imaging order (95% CI, 1.95-2.06). Clinician ownership of imaging equipment was a consistent independent predictor of low-value imaging (OR, 1.65-7.76) across clinician type and imaging scenario. Primary care physicians with the highest rates of low-value back imaging also had 1.53 (95% CI, 1.45-1.61) higher odds of ordering low-value headache imaging.
Clinician characteristics such as ordering low-value imaging on a prior patient, high rates of low-value imaging in another clinical scenario, and ownership of imaging equipment are strong predictors of low-value back and headache imaging. Findings should inform policies that target potentially unnecessary and financially burdensome care.
开具不必要的放射影像检查的临床医生可能会给成本分担不断增加的患者造成经济损害。低价值影像检查的临床医生预测因素在很大程度上尚不清楚。
确定急性单纯性背痛和头痛的低价值影像检查的临床医生预测因素,包括诊治这两种病症的临床医生。
设计、背景和参与者:根据2010年1月至2014年美国一家大型健康保险公司的商业保险理赔记录和人口统计数据,对急性单纯性背痛和头痛就诊后的影像检查率进行多因素逻辑回归建模。参与者包括100977名临床医生(初级保健医生、专科医生和脊椎按摩师)。
记录急性单纯性背痛和头痛就诊后的影像检查情况。我们确定了临床医生之前的患者是否接受过影像检查、临床医生是否拥有影像设备,以及不同临床专科的影响差异。然后,我们将高比例的低价值背部影像检查作为低价值头痛影像检查的预测因素。
临床医生对878720名18至64岁患有急性单纯性背痛的成年人进行了1007392次诊疗;52876名初级保健医生对492805名18至64岁患有急性单纯性头痛的成年人进行了诊疗;34190名初级保健临床医生对344991名18至64岁患有头痛的成年人进行了405721次诊疗,并且还对至少4名背痛患者进行了诊疗。如果一名初级保健医生之前的患者接受了低价值的背部影像检查,那么该患者接受低价值影像检查的几率会高出1.81倍(95%置信区间,1.77 - 1.85)。这种行为效应在脊椎按摩师中更大(优势比[OR],2.80;95%置信区间,2.74 - 2.86),在专科医生中也更大(OR,2.98;95%置信区间,2.88 - 3.07)。对于头痛,之前的低价值头部影像检查预测后续开具头部影像检查医嘱的几率会高出2.00倍(95%置信区间,1.95 - 2.06)。临床医生拥有影像设备是不同临床医生类型和影像检查情形下低价值影像检查的一致独立预测因素(OR,1.65 - 7.76)。低价值背部影像检查率最高的初级保健医生开具低价值头痛影像检查的几率也高出1.53倍(95%置信区间,1.45 - 1.61)。
临床医生的一些特征,如之前对患者开具低价值影像检查、在另一种临床情形下低价值影像检查率高以及拥有影像设备,是低价值背部和头痛影像检查的有力预测因素。研究结果应为针对潜在不必要且造成经济负担的医疗护理的政策提供依据。