Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA; Hutchinson Institute for Cancer Outcomes Research Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center, Seattle, Washington, USA.
Cambia Palliative Care Center of Excellence Department of Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle, Washington, USA.
J Pain Symptom Manage. 2019 Nov;58(5):851-856. doi: 10.1016/j.jpainsymman.2019.07.017. Epub 2019 Jul 23.
Working groups have called for linkages of existing and diverse databases to improve quality measurement in palliative and end-of-life (EOL) care, but limited data are available on the challenges of using different data sources to measure such care.
To assess concordance of data obtained from different sources in a novel linkage of death certificates, electronic health records (EHRs), cancer registry data, and insurance claims for patients who died with cancer.
We joined a database of Washington State death certificates and EHR to a data repository of commercial health plan enrollment and claims files linked to registry records from Puget Sound Cancer Surveillance System. We assessed care in the last month including hospitalizations, intensive care unit (ICU) admissions, emergency department visits, imaging scans, radiation, and hospice, plus chemotherapy in the last 14 days. We used a Chi-squared test to compare differences between health care in EHR and claims.
Records of hospitalization, ICU use, and emergency department use were 33%, 15%, and 33% lower in EHR versus claims, respectively. Radiation, hospice, and imaging were 6%, 14%, and 28% lower, respectively, in EHR, but chemotherapy was 4% higher than that in claims. These differences were statistically different for hospice (P < 0.02), hospitalization, ICU, ER, and imaging (all P < 0.01) but not radiation (P = 0.12) or chemotherapy (P = 0.29).
We found substantial variation between EHR and claims for EOL health-care use. Reliance on EHR will miss some health-care use, while claims will not capture the complex clinical details in EHR that can help define the quality of palliative care and EOL health-care utilization.
工作组呼吁将现有的和多样化的数据库联系起来,以提高姑息治疗和临终关怀(EOL)护理的质量测量,但关于使用不同数据源来衡量此类护理的挑战,可用的数据有限。
评估通过死亡证明、电子健康记录(EHR)、癌症登记数据和保险公司索赔数据的新链接,从不同来源获得的数据的一致性,这些数据是针对癌症死亡患者的。
我们将华盛顿州的死亡证明数据库和 EHR 与商业健康计划登记和索赔文件数据库连接,该数据库与普吉特湾癌症监测系统的登记记录相连接。我们评估了最后一个月的护理情况,包括住院、重症监护病房(ICU)入院、急诊就诊、影像扫描、放疗和临终关怀,以及最后 14 天的化疗。我们使用卡方检验比较 EHR 和索赔中的医疗保健差异。
EHR 中住院、ICU 使用和急诊就诊的记录分别比索赔低 33%、15%和 33%。放疗、临终关怀和影像学分别低 6%、14%和 28%,但化疗比索赔高 4%。在临终关怀(P < 0.02)、住院、ICU、急诊和影像学(均 P < 0.01)方面,这些差异具有统计学意义,但在放疗(P = 0.12)或化疗(P = 0.29)方面则无统计学意义。
我们发现 EHR 和临终关怀保健使用索赔之间存在大量差异。依赖 EHR 将错过一些医疗保健的使用,而索赔则无法捕捉到 EHR 中复杂的临床细节,这些细节可以帮助定义姑息治疗和临终关怀的质量和 EOL 医疗保健的利用情况。