Risk Adjustment Using Automated Ambulatory Pharmacy Data
Top Cited Papers
- 1 January 2003
- journal article
- research article
- Published by Wolters Kluwer Health in Medical Care
- Vol. 41 (1) , 84-99
- https://doi.org/10.1097/00005650-200301000-00011
Abstract
Develop and estimate the RxRisk model, a risk assessment instrument that uses automated ambulatory pharmacy data to identify chronic conditions and predict future health care cost. The RxRisk model's performance in predicting cost is compared with a demographic-only model, the Ambulatory Clinical Groups (ACG), and Hierarchical Coexisting Conditions (HCC) ICD-9-CM diagnosis-based risk assessment instruments. Each model's power to forecast health care resource use is assessed. Health services utilization and cost data for approximately 1.5 million individuals enrolled in five mixed-model Health Maintenance Organizations (HMOs) from different regions in the United States. Retrospective cohort study using automated managed care data. SUBJECTS All persons enrolled during 1995 and 1996 in Group Health Cooperative of Puget Sound, HealthPartners of Minnesota and the Colorado, Ohio and Northeast Regions of Kaiser-Permanente. MEASURES RxRisk, an algorithm that classifies prescription drug fills into chronic disease classes for adults and children. HCCs produce the most accurate forecasts of total costs than either RxRisk or ACGs but RxRisk performs similarly to ACGs. Using the R(2) criteria HCCs explain 15.4% of the prospective variance in cost, whereas RxRisk explains 8.7% and ACGs explain 10.2%. However, for key segments of the cost distribution the differences in forecasting power among HCCs, RxRisk, and ACGs are less obvious, with all three models generating similar predictions for the middle 60% of the cost distribution. HCCs produce more accurate forecasts of total cost, but the pharmacy-based RxRisk is an alternative risk assessment instrument to several diagnostic based models and depending on the nature of the application may be a more appropriate option for medical risk analysis.Keywords
This publication has 14 references indexed in Scilit:
- The Medicaid Rx ModelMedical Care, 2001
- Development and Estimation of a Pediatric Chronic Disease Score Using Automated Pharmacy DataMedical Care, 1999
- Pharmacy Costs GroupsMedical Care, 1999
- 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
- Replicating the chronic disease score (CDS) from automated pharmacy dataJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1994
- 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