Quality of Disease Management and Risk of Mortality in English Primary Care Practices

Details

Serval ID
serval:BIB_6569B0F62E77
Type
Article: article from journal or magazin.
Collection
Publications
Institution
Title
Quality of Disease Management and Risk of Mortality in English Primary Care Practices
Journal
Health Services Research
Author(s)
Dusheiko M., Gravelle H., Martin S., Smith P.C.
ISSN
1475-6773 (Electronic)
ISSN-L
0017-9124
Publication state
Published
Issued date
2015
Volume
50
Number
5
Pages
1452-1471
Language
english
Notes
IUMSP2015/10
Abstract
OBJECTIVE: To investigate whether better management of chronic conditions by family practices reduces mortality risk.
DATA: Two random samples of 5 million patients registered with over 8,000 English family practices followed up for 4 years (2004/5-2007/8). Measures of the quality of disease management for 10 conditions were constructed for each family practice for each year. The outcome measure was an indicator taking the value 1 if the patient died during a specified year, 0 otherwise.
STUDY DESIGN: Cross-section and multilevel panel data multiple logistic regressions were estimated. Covariates included age, gender, morbidity, hospitalizations, attributed socio-economic characteristics, and local health care supply measures.
PRINCIPAL FINDINGS: Although a composite measure of the quality of disease management for all 10 conditions was significantly associated with lower mortality, only the quality of stroke care was significant when all 10 quality measures were entered in the regression.
CONCLUSIONS: The panel data results suggest that a 1 percent improvement in the quality of stroke care could reduce the annual number of deaths in England by 782 [95 percent CI: 423, 1140]. A longer study period may be necessary to detect any mortality impact of better management of other conditions.
Pubmed
Web of science
Create date
26/03/2015 11:33
Last modification date
20/08/2019 14:21
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