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Assessing Quality of Diabetes Care by Measuring Longitudinal Changes in Hemoglobin A1c in the Veterans Health Administration
Author(s) -
Thompson Wes,
Wang Hongwei,
Xie Minge,
Kolassa John,
Rajan Mangala,
Tseng ChinLin,
Crystal Stephen,
Zhang Quanwu,
Vardi Yehuda,
Pogach Leonard,
Safford Monika M.
Publication year - 2005
Publication title -
health services research
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
SCImago Journal Rank - 1.706
H-Index - 121
eISSN - 1475-6773
pISSN - 0017-9124
DOI - 10.1111/j.1475-6773.2005.00439.x
Subject(s) - medicine , decile , confidence interval , diabetes mellitus , health care , demography , emergency medicine , gerontology , environmental health , statistics , mathematics , sociology , economic growth , economics , endocrinology
Context. A1c levels are widely used to assess quality of diabetes care provided by health care systems. Currently, cross‐sectional measures are commonly used for such assessments. Objective. To study within‐patient longitudinal changes in A1c levels at Veterans Health Administration (VHA) facilities as an alternative to cross‐sectional measures of quality of diabetes care. Design. Longitudinal study using institutional data on individual patient A1c level over time (October 1, 1998–September 30, 2000) with time variant and invariant covariates. Setting. One hundred and twenty‐five VHA facilities nationwide, October 1, 1998–September 30, 2000. Patients. Diabetic veteran users with A1c measurement performed using National Glycosylated Hemoglobin Standardization Project certified A1c lab assay methods. Exposures. Characteristics unlikely to reflect quality of care, but known to influence A1c levels, demographics, and baseline illness severity. Main Outcome Measure. Monthly change in A1c for average patient cared for at each facility. Results. The preponderance of facilities showed monthly declines in within‐patient A1c over the study period (mean change of −0.0148 A1c units per month, range −0.074 to 0.042). Individual facilities varied in their monthly change, with 105 facilities showing monthly declines (70 significant at .05 level) and 20 showing monthly increases (5 significant at .05 level). Case‐mix adjustment resulted in modest changes (mean change of −0.0131 case‐mix adjusted A1c units per month, range −0.079 to 0.043). Facilities were ranked from worst to best, with attached 90 percent confidence intervals. Among the bottom 10 ranked facilities, four remained within the bottom decile with 90 percent confidence. Conclusions. There is substantial variation in facility‐level longitudinal changes in A1c levels. We propose that evaluation of change in A1c levels over time can be used as a new measure to reflect quality of care provided to populations of individuals with chronic disease.