Association of wound healing with quality and continuity of care and sociodemographic characteristics

To evaluate the association between clinics' wound healing performance and clinic-level measures of care continuity, clinical quality, and sociodemographic characteristics of the population in their catchment areas. In this cross-sectional analysis, we analyzed electronic health records for 180...

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Veröffentlicht in:The American journal of managed care 2022-04, Vol.28 (4), p.e146-e152
Hauptverfasser: Cho, Sang Kyu, Mattke, Soeren, Sheridan, Mary, Ennis, William
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creator Cho, Sang Kyu
Mattke, Soeren
Sheridan, Mary
Ennis, William
description To evaluate the association between clinics' wound healing performance and clinic-level measures of care continuity, clinical quality, and sociodemographic characteristics of the population in their catchment areas. In this cross-sectional analysis, we analyzed electronic health records for 180,336 chronic wounds from 480 wound care clinics during the 2018 calendar year. We measured healing performance using a clinic's observed to expected (O/E) ratio, which is based on the rate at which chronic wounds were predicted to heal within 12 weeks given its case mix and the actual healing rate. We compared the top and bottom quintiles, in terms of the O/E ratio, of clinics. Multivariable regression was used to estimate the effect of the clinic-level measures on the O/E ratio. Clinics in the top quintile had higher rates of care continuity and quality measures, as well as a lower proportion of disadvantaged populations in their catchment areas. In the regression model, 10% increases in a clinic's rate of weekly provider visits, nurse visits, and debridement were associated with 2.5%, 3.0% and 0.7% increases, respectively, in the O/E ratio. The weekly provider visit rate had a greater marginal effect when the proportion of African American residents in the clinic's catchment area was larger. Clinic-level measures of care continuity, clinical quality, and sociodemographic composition of their catchment areas' population explain a meaningful part of differences in clinics' wound healing performance. Better care continuity appears to have a greater beneficial effect in disadvantaged populations.
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In this cross-sectional analysis, we analyzed electronic health records for 180,336 chronic wounds from 480 wound care clinics during the 2018 calendar year. We measured healing performance using a clinic's observed to expected (O/E) ratio, which is based on the rate at which chronic wounds were predicted to heal within 12 weeks given its case mix and the actual healing rate. We compared the top and bottom quintiles, in terms of the O/E ratio, of clinics. Multivariable regression was used to estimate the effect of the clinic-level measures on the O/E ratio. Clinics in the top quintile had higher rates of care continuity and quality measures, as well as a lower proportion of disadvantaged populations in their catchment areas. In the regression model, 10% increases in a clinic's rate of weekly provider visits, nurse visits, and debridement were associated with 2.5%, 3.0% and 0.7% increases, respectively, in the O/E ratio. The weekly provider visit rate had a greater marginal effect when the proportion of African American residents in the clinic's catchment area was larger. Clinic-level measures of care continuity, clinical quality, and sociodemographic composition of their catchment areas' population explain a meaningful part of differences in clinics' wound healing performance. 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subjects Ambulatory Care Facilities
At risk populations
Clinics
Compression therapy
Continuity of care
Continuity of Patient Care
Cross-Sectional Studies
Debridement
Diabetes
Electronic Health Records
Family income
Foot diseases
Hospitals
Humans
Leg ulcers
Patients
Population
Ratios
Sociodemographics
Variables
Wound Healing
title Association of wound healing with quality and continuity of care and sociodemographic characteristics
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