Does Meeting the HEDIS Substance Abuse Treatment Engagement Criterion Predict Patient Outcomes?
- 3 September 2008
- journal article
- Published by Springer Nature in The Journal of Behavioral Health Services & Research
- Vol. 37 (1) , 25-39
- https://doi.org/10.1007/s11414-008-9142-2
Abstract
This study examines the patient-level associations between the Health Plan Employer Data and Information Set (HEDIS) substance use disorder (SUD) treatment engagement quality indicator and improvements in clinical outcomes. Administrative and survey data from 2,789 US Department of Veterans Affairs SUD patients were used to estimate the effects of meeting the HEDIS engagement criterion on improvements in Addiction Severity Index Alcohol, Drug, and Legal composite scores. Patients meeting the engagement indicator improved significantly more in all domains than patients who did not engage, and the relationship was stronger for alcohol and legal outcomes for patients seen in outpatient settings. The benefit accrued by those who engaged was statistically significant but clinically modest. These results add to the literature documenting the clinical benefits of treatment entry and engagement. Although these findings only indirectly support the use of the HEDIS engagement measure for its intended purpose—discriminating quality at the facility or system level—they confirm that the processes of care captured by the measure are associated with important patient outcomes.Keywords
This publication has 28 references indexed in Scilit:
- Performance measurement for systems treating alcohol and drug use disordersJournal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 2007
- Are Washington Circle performance measures associated with decreased criminal activity following treatment?Journal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 2007
- A practical system for monitoring the outcomes of substance use disorder patientsJournal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 2006
- Special Section on the GAF: Continuity of Care and Clinical Outcomes in a National Health SystemPsychiatric Services, 2005
- Continuity of Care and Clinical EffectivenessMedical Care, 2002
- Application of random-effects pattern-mixture models for missing data in longitudinal studies.Psychological Methods, 1997
- The fifth edition of the addiction severity indexJournal of Substance Abuse Treatment, 1992
- Ecological Bias, Confounding, and Effect ModificationInternational Journal of Epidemiology, 1989
- Inference and missing dataBiometrika, 1976
- Ecological Correlations and the Behavior of IndividualsAmerican Sociological Review, 1950