Quality in Primary Care Open Access

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Abstract

Use of interval based quality indicators in blood pressure management to enhance quality of pay for performance incentives: comparison to two indicators from the Quality and Outcomes Framework

Thusitha Mabotuwana, Jim Warren, C Raina Elley, John Kennelly, Chris Paton, Debra Warren, Kuinileti Chang Wai, Stewart Wells

BackgroundPay for performance incentives are becoming increasingly popular, but are typically based on only a single point-in-time measurement as an indicator of chronic condition management. Aims To determine the association between three time-interval based indicators of suboptimal blood pressure (BP) control and two point-in-time indicators from the UK Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF): BP5 (the percentage of patients with hypertension in whom the last BP in the previous nine months was _150/90) and DM12 (the percentage of patients with diabetes in whom the last BP in the previous 15 months was _145/85). MethodsWe extracted classification data and BP measurements from four New Zealand general practices with 4260 to 6130 enrolled patients. Data were analysed for three indicators with respect to a nine-month evaluation period for patients with hypertension and a 15-month period for patients with diabetes: (1) two or more consistently high BP measurements spaced over _90 days, (2) a high BP measurement followed by a lapse of >120 days in BP measurement and (3) no BP measurement for >180 days.Results For the four practices, 65–81% of the patients satisfied BP5 and 59–68% of patients satisfiedDM12. Of the hypertension patients satisfying BP5, 31% (95% CI: 28–33%) failed at least one of the three interval based indicators; 42% (95% CI: 39–46%) of the diabetes patients satisfying DM12 failed at least one of the three interval based indicators. ConclusionConsidering only a point-in-time controlled BP measurement provides an incomplete view of the quality of BP management in patients with hypertension or diabetes over a period of time.

Quality in Primary Care

Volume:18 Issue:2

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