Effect of physician profiling on utilization
- 1 October 1996
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in Journal of General Internal Medicine
- Vol. 11 (10) , 584-590
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf02599025
Abstract
OBJECTIVES: An American Medical Association survey reported that more than half of physicians are subjects of either clinical or economic profiling. This multilevel meta-analysis was designed to assess the clinical effect of peer-comparison feedback intervention (profiles) in changing practice patterns. METHODS: Systematic computerized and manual searches were combined to retrieve articles on randomized controlled clinical trials testing profiling reports. Eligible studies were randomized, controlled clinical trials that tested peer-comparison feedback intervention and measured utilization of clinical procedures. To use all available information, data were abstracted and analyzed on three levels: (1) direction of effects, (2)p value from the statistical comparison, and (3) odds ratio (OR). MAIN RESULTS: In the 12 eligible trials, 553 physicians were profiled. The test result wasp<.05 for the vote-counting sign test of 12 studies (level 1) andp<.05 for the z-transformation test of 8 studies (level 2). There were 5 trials included in the OR analysis (level 3). The primary effect variable in two of the 5 trials had a nonsignificant OR. However, the overall OR calculated by the Mantel-Haenszel method was significant (1.091, confidence interval: 1.045 to 1.136). CONCLUSIONS: Profiling has a statistically significant, but minimal effect on the utilization of clinical procedures. The results of this study indicate a need for controlled clinical evaluations before subjecting large numbers of physicians to utilization management interventions.Keywords
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