National Initiative on Cancer Care Quality

2002 ◽  
Vol 24 (6) ◽  
pp. 62-64
Author(s):  
Gretchen Henkel
2004 ◽  
Vol 22 (15) ◽  
pp. 2985-2991 ◽  
Author(s):  
Eric C. Schneider ◽  
Arnold M. Epstein ◽  
Jennifer L. Malin ◽  
Katherine L. Kahn ◽  
Ezekiel J. Emanuel

2006 ◽  
Author(s):  
Maria Hewitt ◽  
Joseph Simone ◽  
Jennifer Malin ◽  
Katherine Kahn ◽  
Elizabeth McGlynn ◽  
...  

2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (28_suppl) ◽  
pp. 42-42
Author(s):  
Benjamin Urick ◽  
Sabree Burbage ◽  
Christopher Baggett ◽  
Jennifer Elston Lafata ◽  
Hanna Kelly Sanoff ◽  
...  

42 Background: As value-based payment models for cancer care expand, the need for measures which reliably assess the quality of care provided increases. This is especially true for models like the Oncology Care Model (OCM) that rely on quality rankings to determine potential shared savings. Under models like these, unreliable measures may result in arbitrary application of value-based payments. The goal of this project is to evaluate the extent to which measures used within the OCM are reliable indicators of provider performance. Methods: Data for this project came from North Carolina Medicare claims from 2015-2017. Episodes were attributed to physician practices at the tax identification number (TIN) level, lasted 6 months, and were divided into two performance years beginning 1/1/2016 and 7/1/2016. TINs with fewer than 20 attributed patients were excluded. Three claims-based OCM measures were used in this evaluation: 1) proportion of episodes with all-cause hospital admissions; 2) proportion of episodes with all-cause emergency department (ED) visits or observation stays; and 3) proportion of patients that died who were admitted to hospice for 3 days or more. Risk adjustment followed the method described by measure specifications from the OCM. Reliability was calculated as the ratio of between practice variation (e.g. signal) to the sum of between practice variation and within practice variation (e.g. noise). Variance estimates were derived from hierarchical logistic regression models used for risk adjustment. Results: For the hospitalization and ED visit measures, episode counts for years 1 and 2 were 30,746 and 28,430 and TIN counts were 86 and 84, respectively. Hospice use measures had fewer episodes (2,677 and 2,428) and TINs (36 and 33). Across all measures, median reliability scores failed to achieve the recommended 0.7 threshold and only hospice had a median reliability score above 0.5 (Table). Conclusions: These findings suggest claims-based measures included in the OCM may produce imprecise estimates of provider performance and are vulnerable to random variation. Consideration should be given to developing alternative measures which may be more reliable estimates of provider performance and to increasing minimum denominator requirements for existing measures.[Table: see text]


2021 ◽  
Vol 39 (28_suppl) ◽  
pp. 251-251
Author(s):  
Meghan Brooke Taylor ◽  
Meredith Ray ◽  
Nicholas Faris ◽  
Matthew Smeltzer ◽  
Carrie Fehnel ◽  
...  

251 Background: Lung cancer care is complex, but, for quality improvement, can be simplified into five ‘nodal points’: lesion detection, diagnostic biopsy, radiologic staging, invasive staging, and treatment. We previously demonstrated great heterogeneity in passage through these nodal points in patients who received surgical resection for lung cancer in our healthcare system. However, examining only surgical patients may underestimate the enormity of the opportunity for quality improvement. With the aim of identifying quality gaps in pre-treatment evaluation for lung cancer, we evaluated the flow of care through these nodal points within a community-based healthcare system. Methods: We classified lung cancer care procedures received by all suspected lung cancer patients treated within the Multidisciplinary Thoracic Oncology Program at Baptist Cancer Center, Memphis TN between 2014 and 2019, into five nodal points. We compared the frequency of, and time intervals between, nodal points among patients receiving surgical, nonsurgical (chemotherapy/radiation), or no definitive treatment, using Chi-square or Kruskal Wallis tests, where appropriate. Results: Of 1304 eligible patients: 11% had no pre-treatment diagnostic procedure, 20% no PET/CT, and 39% no invasive staging. 39% of patients underwent surgical resection, 51% received non-surgical treatment, and 10% received no treatment. Patients who had surgery were less likely than those who had non-surgical treatment to get a diagnostic test, radiologic staging, and invasive staging (Table). Patients who had non-surgical treatment were more likely to pass through all five nodal points (50% v 68%, p<0.0001). The median (IQR) duration from initial lesion identification to treatment (n=1126) was 77 days (45-190); 27 days (10-90) from lesion identification to diagnostic biopsy (n=1115); and 38 days (26-63) from diagnostic biopsy to treatment (n=1041). Patients who had surgery received less timely care than those who had non-surgical or no treatment: median 122 v 66 v 68 days from lesion identification to treatment; 40 v 21 v 29 days from lesion identification to diagnostic biopsy; 46 v 38 v 31 days from diagnostic biopsy to treatment (p<0.0001 all comparisons). Conclusions: Quality improvement initiatives within our healthcare system, such as the establishment of a coordinated multidisciplinary program, enhanced care quality over previous benchmarks. Despite improvements, lung cancer patients who had surgery received less frequent and less timely pre-treatment evaluation than those without surgery. Implementing a standardized cancer care pathway from diagnosis to surgery could help to reduce variations in optimal care delivery.[Table: see text]


2019 ◽  
Vol 29 (2) ◽  
pp. 103-112 ◽  
Author(s):  
Ryan J Ellis ◽  
Cary Jo R Schlick ◽  
Joe Feinglass ◽  
Mary F Mulcahy ◽  
Al B Benson ◽  
...  

BackgroundChemotherapy quality measures consider hospitals compliant when chemotherapy is recommended, even if it is not received. This may mask shortcomings in cancer care delivery. Objectives of this study were to (1) identify patient factors associated with failure to receive recommended chemotherapy without a documented contraindication and (2) assess hospital variation in failure to administer recommended chemotherapy.MethodsPatients from 2005 to 2015 with breast, colon and lung cancers who failed to receive recommended chemotherapy were identified using the National Cancer Database. Hospital-level rates of failure to administer recommended chemotherapy were calculated, and patient and hospital factors associated with failure to receive recommended chemotherapy were identified by multivariable logistic regression.ResultsA total of 183 148 patients at 1281 hospitals were analysed. Overall, 3.5% of patients with breast, 6.6% with colon and 10.7% with lung cancers failed to receive recommended chemotherapy. Patients were less likely to receive recommended chemotherapy in all cancers if uninsured or on Medicaid (p<0.05), as were non-Hispanic black patients with both breast and colon cancer (p<0.001). Significant hospital variation was observed, with hospital-level rates of failure to administer recommended chemotherapy as high as 21.8% in breast, 40.2% in colon and 40.0% in lung cancers.Conclusions and relevanceThough overall rates are low, failure to receive recommended chemotherapy is associated with sociodemographic factors. Hospital variation in failure to administer recommended chemotherapy is masked by current quality measure definitions and may define a significant and unmeasured difference in hospital quality.


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