Development and Estimation of a Pediatric Chronic Disease Score Using Automated Pharmacy Data
- 1 September 1999
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Medical Care
- Vol. 37 (9) , 874-883
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005650-199909000-00004
Abstract
Although risk assessment models for specific adult populations such as the elderly have been developed, little work has focused on developing pediatric-specific models. The lack of pediatric models may result in incorrect estimates of relative disease severity among children, in reduced reimbursement for health plans and providers, and in inadequate health care for chronically ill children. To develop and to evaluate a pediatric risk assessment model using automated pharmacy data. Retrospective, case-cohort study using automated data. All children continuously enrolled in Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound during 1992 and 1993. The Pediatric Chronic Disease Score (PCDS), an algorithm that classified children into chronic disease categories by prescription drug fills, was compared with the ICD-9-CM-based Ambulatory Care Groups (ACG) model and a demographic model for prediction of total, ambulatory, or primary care costs and primary care visits. Forecast models were estimated using linear regression and they were evaluated with R2, mean prediction error, mean squared prediction error, and Mincer-Zarnowitz tests. The pharmacy-based PCDS performed significantly better on each of the four forecasting accuracy tests than did a demographic model (eg, R2s averaging fourfold higher). Compared with the ACG model, the PCDS model performed similarly on mean squared prediction error tests; however, the ACG generally had higher validation R2 values. A pharmacy-based pediatric risk assessment model performs better than a demographic model and represents a viable alternative to ICD-9-CM-based models. Further research is necessary to determine if children must be considered separately from adults when conducting population-based risk assessments.Keywords
This publication has 16 references indexed in Scilit:
- Protecting children with chronic illness in a competitive marketplacePublished by American Medical Association (AMA) ,1995
- A Chronic Disease Score with Empirically Derived WeightsMedical Care, 1995
- Patterns of Childhood Medical SpendingArchives of Pediatrics & Adolescent Medicine, 1995
- Replicating the chronic disease score (CDS) from automated pharmacy dataJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1994
- Prevalence and impact of multiple childhood chronic illnessesThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1994
- Childhood chronic illness: prevalence, severity, and impact.American Journal of Public Health, 1992
- Development and Application of a Population-Oriented Measure of Ambulatory Care Case-MixMedical Care, 1991
- Choosing between the Sample-Selection Model and the Multi-Part ModelJournal of Business & Economic Statistics, 1984
- Smearing Estimate: A Nonparametric Retransformation MethodJournal of the American Statistical Association, 1983
- A Comparison of Alternative Models for the Demand for Medical CareJournal of Business & Economic Statistics, 1983