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Hospital Variation in Patient-Reported Outcomes at the Level of EQ-5D Dimensions: Evidence from England
Background. The English Department of Health has introduced routine collection of patient-reported outcome data for selected surgical procedures to facilitate patient choice and increase hospital accountability. However, using aggregate health outcome scores, such as EQ-5D utilities, for performance...
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Published in: | Medical decision making 2013-08, Vol.33 (6), p.804-818 |
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Main Authors: | , , , , |
Format: | Article |
Language: | English |
Subjects: | |
Citations: | Items that this one cites Items that cite this one |
Online Access: | Get full text |
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Summary: | Background. The English Department of Health has introduced routine collection of
patient-reported outcome data for selected surgical procedures to facilitate patient choice and
increase hospital accountability. However, using aggregate health outcome scores, such as EQ-5D
utilities, for performance assessment purposes causes information loss and raises statistical and
normative concerns. Objectives. For hip replacement surgery, we explore a) the change
in patient-reported outcomes between baseline and follow-up on 5 health dimensions (EQ-5D), b) the
extent to which treatment impact varies across hospitals, and c) the extent to which hospital
performance on EQ-5D dimensions is correlated with performance on the EQ-5D utility index.
Methods. We combine information on pre- and postoperative EQ-5D outcomes with routine
inpatient data for the financial year 2009–2010. The sample consists of 21,000 patients in
153 hospitals. We employ hierarchical ordered probit risk-adjustment models that recognize the
multilevel nature of the data and the response distributions. The treatment impact is modeled as a
random coefficient that varies at the hospital level. We obtain hospital-specific empirical Bayes
(EB) estimates of this coefficient. We estimate separate models for each EQ-5D dimension and the
EQ-5D utility index and analyze correlations of EB estimates across these. Results.
Hospital treatment is associated with improvements in all EQ-5D dimensions. Variability in treatment
impact is most pronounced on the mobility and usual activities dimensions. Conversely, only
pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression correlate well with performance measures based on utilities.
This leads to different assessments of hospital performance across metrics.
Conclusions. Our results indicate which hospitals are better than others in improving
health across particular EQ-5D dimensions. We demonstrate the importance of evaluating dimensions of
the EQ-5D separately for the purposes of hospital performance assessment. |
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ISSN: | 0272-989X 1552-681X |
DOI: | 10.1177/0272989X13482523 |