Point: Will Public Reporting of Health-care Quality Measures Inform and Educate Patients? Yes

CHEST Journal ◽  
2011 ◽  
Vol 140 (5) ◽  
pp. 1115-1117 ◽  
Author(s):  
Mark L. Metersky
2015 ◽  
Vol 39 (6) ◽  
pp. E3 ◽  
Author(s):  
Kimon Bekelis ◽  
Matthew J. McGirt ◽  
Scott L. Parker ◽  
Christopher M. Holland ◽  
Jason Davies ◽  
...  

Quality measurement and public reporting are intended to facilitate targeted outcome improvement, practice-based learning, shared decision making, and effective resource utilization. However, regulatory implementation has created a complex network of reporting requirements for physicians and medical practices. These include Medicare’s Physician Quality Reporting System, Electronic Health Records Meaningful Use, and Value-Based Payment Modifier programs. The common denominator of all these initiatives is that to avoid penalties, physicians must meet “generic” quality standards that, in the case of neurosurgery and many other specialties, are not pertinent to everyday clinical practice and hold specialists accountable for care decisions outside of their direct control. The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services has recently authorized alternative quality reporting mechanisms for the Physician Quality Reporting System, which allow registries to become subspecialty-reporting mechanisms under the Qualified Clinical Data Registry (QCDR) program. These programs further give subspecialties latitude to develop measures of health care quality that are relevant to the care provided. As such, these programs amplify the power of clinical registries by allowing more accurate assessment of practice patterns, patient experiences, and overall health care value. Neurosurgery has been at the forefront of these developments, leveraging the experience of the National Neurosurgery Quality and Outcomes Database to create one of the first specialty-specific QCDRs. Recent legislative reform has continued to change this landscape and has fueled optimism that registries (including QCDRs) and other specialty-driven quality measures will be a prominent feature of federal and private sector quality improvement initiatives. These physician- and patient-driven methods will allow neurosurgery to underscore the value of interventions, contribute to the development of sustainable health care solutions, and actively participate in meaningful quality initiatives for the benefit of the patients served.


Author(s):  
Claire M. Campbell ◽  
Daniel R. Murphy ◽  
George E. Taffet ◽  
Anita B. Major ◽  
Christine S. Ritchie ◽  
...  

2019 ◽  
Vol 35 (2) ◽  
pp. 177-185
Author(s):  
David M. Hartley ◽  
Susannah Jonas ◽  
Daniel Grossoehme ◽  
Amy Kelly ◽  
Cassandra Dodds ◽  
...  

Measures of health care quality are produced from a variety of data sources, but often, physicians do not believe these measures reflect the quality of provided care. The aim was to assess the value to health system leaders (HSLs) and parents of benchmarking on health care quality measures using data mined from the electronic health record (EHR). Using in-context interviews with HSLs and parents, the authors investigated what new decisions and actions benchmarking using data mined from the EHR may enable and how benchmarking information should be presented to be most informative. Results demonstrate that although parents may have little experience using data on health care quality for decision making, they affirmed its potential value. HSLs expressed the need for high-confidence, validated metrics. They also perceived barriers to achieving meaningful metrics but recognized that mining data directly from the EHR could overcome those barriers. Parents and HSLs need high-confidence health care quality data to support decision making.


2018 ◽  
Vol 21 (4) ◽  
pp. 296-302 ◽  
Author(s):  
Stephanie MacLeod ◽  
Kay Schwebke ◽  
Kevin Hawkins ◽  
Joann Ruiz ◽  
Emma Hoo ◽  
...  

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