1 Department of Veterans Affairs Center for Health Equity Research and Promotion Pittsburgh PA.
2 Division of General Internal Medicine Department of Medicine University of Pennsylvania School of Medicine Philadelphia PA.
J Am Heart Assoc. 2019 May 7;8(9):e011672. doi: 10.1161/JAHA.118.011672.
Background The attitudes of Department of Veterans Affairs ( VA ) cardiovascular clinicians toward the VA 's quality-of-care processes, clinical outcomes measures, and healthcare value are not well understood. Methods and Results Semistructured telephone interviews were conducted with cardiovascular healthcare providers (n=31) at VA hospitals that were previously identified as high or low performers in terms of healthcare value. The interviews focused on VA providers' experiences with measures of processes, outcomes, and value (ie, costs relative to outcomes) of cardiovascular care. Most providers were aware of process-of-care measurements, received regular feedback generated from those data, and used that feedback to change their practices. Fewer respondents reported clinical outcomes measures influencing their practice, and virtually no participants used value data to inform their practice, although several described administrative barriers limiting high-cost care. Providers also expressed general enthusiasm for the VA 's quality measurement/improvement efforts, with relatively few criticisms about the workload or opportunity costs inherent in clinical performance data collection. There were no material differences in the responses of employees of low-performing versus high-performing VA medical centers. Conclusions Regardless of their medical center's healthcare value performance, most VA cardiovascular providers used feedback from process-of-care data to inform their practice. However, clinical outcomes data were used more rarely, and value-of-care data were almost never used. The limited use of outcomes data to inform healthcare practice raises concern that healthcare outcomes may have insufficient influence, whereas the lack of value data influencing cardiovascular care practices may perpetuate inefficiencies in resource use.
退伍军人事务部(VA)心血管临床医生对 VA 的医疗质量流程、临床结果衡量标准和医疗保健价值的态度尚不清楚。
对 VA 医院的心血管医疗保健提供者(n=31)进行了半结构化电话访谈,这些医院此前在医疗保健价值方面被确定为表现良好或不佳的医院。访谈重点是 VA 提供者在心血管护理的流程、结果和价值(即相对于结果的成本)方面的经验。大多数提供者都知道流程测量,定期收到来自这些数据的反馈,并利用这些反馈来改变他们的做法。较少的受访者报告说临床结果衡量标准影响他们的实践,几乎没有参与者使用价值数据来指导他们的实践,尽管有几位参与者描述了限制高成本护理的行政障碍。提供者还对 VA 的质量衡量/改进工作表示普遍热情,对临床绩效数据收集固有的工作量或机会成本的批评相对较少。表现不佳和表现良好的 VA 医疗中心的员工的反应没有实质性差异。
无论其医疗中心的医疗保健价值表现如何,大多数 VA 心血管提供者都使用流程数据的反馈来指导他们的实践。然而,临床结果数据的使用频率较低,而护理价值数据的使用则几乎从未使用过。结果数据在告知医疗保健实践方面的有限使用引起了人们的关注,即医疗保健结果可能没有足够的影响力,而缺乏价值数据影响心血管护理实践可能会使资源利用效率低下持续存在。