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. 2012 Aug;21(8):634-40.
doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2011-000737. Epub 2012 May 23.

Should measures of patient experience in primary care be adjusted for case mix? Evidence from the English General Practice Patient Survey

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Should measures of patient experience in primary care be adjusted for case mix? Evidence from the English General Practice Patient Survey

Charlotte Paddison et al. BMJ Qual Saf. 2012 Aug.

Abstract

Objectives: Uncertainties exist about when and how best to adjust performance measures for case mix. Our aims are to quantify the impact of case-mix adjustment on practice-level scores in a national survey of patient experience, to identify why and when it may be useful to adjust for case mix, and to discuss unresolved policy issues regarding the use of case-mix adjustment in performance measurement in health care.

Design/setting: Secondary analysis of the 2009 English General Practice Patient Survey. Responses from 2 163 456 patients registered with 8267 primary care practices. Linear mixed effects models were used with practice included as a random effect and five case-mix variables (gender, age, race/ethnicity, deprivation, and self-reported health) as fixed effects.

Main outcome measures: Primary outcome was the impact of case-mix adjustment on practice-level means (adjusted minus unadjusted) and changes in practice percentile ranks for questions measuring patient experience in three domains of primary care: access; interpersonal care; anticipatory care planning, and overall satisfaction with primary care services.

Results: Depending on the survey measure selected, case-mix adjustment changed the rank of between 0.4% and 29.8% of practices by more than 10 percentile points. Adjusting for case-mix resulted in large increases in score for a small number of practices and small decreases in score for a larger number of practices. Practices with younger patients, more ethnic minority patients and patients living in more socio-economically deprived areas were more likely to gain from case-mix adjustment. Age and race/ethnicity were the most influential adjustors.

Conclusions: While its effect is modest for most practices, case-mix adjustment corrects significant underestimation of scores for a small proportion of practices serving vulnerable patients and may reduce the risk that providers would 'cream-skim' by not enrolling patients from vulnerable socio-demographic groups.

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Conflict of interest statement

Competing interests: The authors have no conflicts of interest as defined by the International Committee of Medical Journal Editors. MR and JC act as academic advisors to Ipsos MORI for the development of the General Practice Patient Survey and have received remuneration for this.

Figures

Figure 1
Figure 1
Boxplot showing impact of case-mix adjustment on practice level means (adjusted–unadjusted means). Whiskers show 1.5 IQR beyond the actual IQR; cases outside the IQR by at least 3 IQR are shown as*.
Figure 2
Figure 2
Average discordance of ranks across all items using data on Kendall's Tau and intraclass correlation coefficients (ICCs) to identify the variables that have the biggest impact when case-mix adjustment is applied.

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