Measuring the Quality of Physician Practice by Using Clinical Vignettes: A Prospective Validation Study
Top Cited Papers
- 16 November 2004
- journal article
- research article
- Published by American College of Physicians in Annals of Internal Medicine
- Vol. 141 (10) , 771-780
- https://doi.org/10.7326/0003-4819-141-10-200411160-00008
Abstract
Worldwide efforts are under way to improve the quality of clinical practice. Most quality measurements, however, are poorly validated, expensive, and difficult to compare among sites. To validate whether vignettes accurately measure the quality of clinical practice by using a comparison with standardized patients (the gold standard method), and to determine whether vignettes are a more or less accurate method than medical record abstraction. Prospective, multisite study. Outpatient primary care clinics in 2 Veterans Affairs medical centers and 2 large, private medical centers. 144 of 163 eligible physicians agreed to participate, and, of these, 116 were randomly selected to see standardized patients, to complete vignettes, or both. Scores, expressed as the percentage of explicit quality criteria correctly completed, were obtained by using 3 methods. Among all physicians, the quality of clinical practice as measured by the standardized patients was 73% correct (95% CI, 72.1% to 73.4%). By using exactly the same criteria, physicians scored 68% (CI, 67.9% to 68.9%) when measured by the vignettes but only 63% (CI, 62.7% to 64.0%) when assessed by medical record abstraction. These findings were consistent across all diseases and were independent of case complexity or physician training level. Vignettes also accurately measured unnecessary care. Finally, vignettes seem to capture the range in the quality of clinical practice among physicians within a site. Despite finding variation in the quality of clinical practice, we did not determine whether poorer quality translated into worse health status for patients. In addition, the quality scores are based on measurements from 1 patient–provider interaction. As with all other scoring criteria, vignette criteria must be regularly updated. Vignettes are a valid tool for measuring the quality of clinical practice. They can be used for diverse clinical settings, diseases, physician types, and situations in which case-mix variation is a concern. They are inexpensive and easy to use. Vignettes are particularly useful for comparing quality among and within sites and may be useful for longitudinal evaluations of interventions intended to change clinical practice.Keywords
This publication has 46 references indexed in Scilit:
- Determinants of PHC productivity and resource utilization: a comparison of public and private physicians in MacedoniaHealth Policy, 2002
- Are Psychiatrists’ Characteristics Related to How They Care for Depression in the Medically Ill?: Results From a National Case-Vignette SurveyPsychosomatics, 2001
- Relation Between Pediatric Experience and Treatment Recommendations for Children and Adolescents With Kidney FailureJAMA, 2001
- How well does chart abstraction measure quality? A prospective comparison of standardized patients with the medical recordThe American Journal of Medicine, 2000
- Variations in sick-listing practice among male and female physicians of different specialities based on case vignettesScandinavian Journal of Primary Health Care, 2000
- Using vignettes to collect data for nursing research studies: how valid are the findings?Journal of Clinical Nursing, 1996
- His and Her Individualisms? Sex Bias and Individualism in Psychologists' Responses to Case VignettesThe Journal of Psychology, 1996
- The importance of severity of illness adjustment in predicting adverse outcomes in the Medicare populationJournal of Clinical Epidemiology, 1995
- Designing and using measures of quality based on physician office recordsThe Journal of Ambulatory Care Management, 1995
- How Accurate are Hospital Discharge Data for Evaluating Effectiveness of Care?Medical Care, 1993