Physician Cost Profiling — Reliability and Risk of Misclassification
- 18 March 2010
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Massachusetts Medical Society in New England Journal of Medicine
- Vol. 362 (11) , 1014-1021
- https://doi.org/10.1056/nejmsa0906323
Abstract
Insurance products with incentives for patients to choose physicians classified as offering lower-cost care on the basis of cost-profiling tools are increasingly common. However, no rigorous evaluation has been undertaken to determine whether these tools can accurately distinguish higher-cost physicians from lower-cost physicians. We aggregated claims data for the years 2004 and 2005 from four health plans in Massachusetts. We used commercial software to construct clinically homogeneous episodes of care (e.g., treatment of diabetes, heart attack, or urinary tract infection), assigned each episode to a physician, and created a summary profile of resource use (i.e., cost) for each physician on the basis of all assigned episodes. We estimated the reliability (signal-to-noise ratio) of each physician's cost-profile score on a scale of 0 to 1, with 0 indicating that all differences in physicians' cost profiles are due to a lack of precision in the measure (noise) and 1 indicating that all differences are due to real variation in costs of services (signal). We used the reliability results to estimate the proportion of physicians in each specialty whose cost performance would be classified inaccurately in a two-tiered insurance product in which the physicians with cost profiles in the lowest quartile were labeled as “lower cost.” Median reliabilities ranged from 0.05 for vascular surgery to 0.79 for gastroenterology and otolaryngology. Overall, 59% of physicians had cost-profile scores with reliabilities of less than 0.70, a commonly used marker of suboptimal reliability. Using our reliability results, we estimated that 22% of physicians would be misclassified in a two-tiered system. Current methods for profiling physicians with respect to costs of services may produce misleading results.This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- Benchmarking physician performance: reliability of individual and composite measures.2008
- Do Managed Care Plans’ Tiered Networks Lead To Inequities In Care For Minority Patients?Health Affairs, 2008
- Episode-Based Physician Profiling: A Guide to the PerplexingJournal of General Internal Medicine, 2008
- Discretionary Decision Making By Primary Care Physicians And The Cost Of U.S. Health CareHealth Affairs, 2008
- Comparing Physicians on EfficiencyNew England Journal of Medicine, 2007
- Does Affiliation of Physician Groups with One Another Produce Higher Quality Primary Care?Journal of General Internal Medicine, 2007
- Economic Profiling of Physician Specialists: Use of Outlier Treatment and Episode Attribution RulesINQUIRY: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing, 2006
- Measuring patients’ experiences with individual primary care physiciansJournal of General Internal Medicine, 2006
- Estimating Hospital Deaths Due to Medical ErrorsJAMA, 2001
- The Future of Data AnalysisThe Annals of Mathematical Statistics, 1962