• Am J Prev Med · Nov 2016

    Comparative Study

    Measuring Preventive Care Delivery: Comparing Rates Across Three Data Sources.

    • Steffani R Bailey, John D Heintzman, Miguel Marino, Megan J Hoopes, Brigit A Hatch, Rachel Gold, Stuart C Cowburn, Christine A Nelson, Heather E Angier, and Jennifer E DeVoe.
    • Department of Family Medicine, Oregon Health & Science University, Portland, Oregon. Electronic address: bailstef@ohsu.edu.
    • Am J Prev Med. 2016 Nov 1; 51 (5): 752761752-761.

    IntroductionPreventive care delivery is an important quality outcome, and electronic data reports are being used increasingly to track these services. It is highly informative when electronic data sources are compared to information manually extracted from medical charts to assess validity and completeness.MethodsThis cross-sectional study used a random sample of Medicaid-insured patients seen at 43 community health centers in 2011 to calculate standard measures of correspondence between manual chart review and two automated sources (electronic health records [EHRs] and Medicaid claims), comparing documentation of orders for and receipt of ten preventive services (n=150 patients/service). Data were analyzed in 2015.ResultsUsing manual chart review as the gold standard, automated EHR extraction showed near-perfect to perfect agreement (κ=0.96-1.0) for services received within the primary care setting (e.g., BMI, blood pressure). Receipt of breast and colorectal cancer screenings, services commonly referred out, showed moderate (κ=0.42) to substantial (κ=0.62) agreement, respectively. Automated EHR extraction showed near-perfect agreement (κ=0.83-0.97) for documentation of ordered services. Medicaid claims showed near-perfect agreement (κ=0.87) for hyperlipidemia and diabetes screening, and substantial agreement (κ=0.67-0.80) for receipt of breast, cervical, and colorectal cancer screenings, and influenza vaccination. Claims showed moderate agreement (κ=0.59) for chlamydia screening receipt. Medicaid claims did not capture ordered or unbilled services.ConclusionsFindings suggest that automated EHR and claims data provide valid sources for measuring receipt of most preventive services; however, ordered and unbilled services were primarily captured via EHR data and completed referrals were more often documented in claims data.Copyright © 2016 American Journal of Preventive Medicine. Published by Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved.

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