Study maps where US patients appear more ill than they are
By a
Population health is typically measured according to medical claims data based on the diseases individuals are diagnosed with and treated for. But the study shows that, in practice, such measures reflect not only the underlying health of local populations, but also the propensity of providers to offer tests and treatments, a phenomenon the
Because patients in areas with greater diagnostic intensity will have more health problems diagnosed and entered into their records, insurance-based health metrics will make those patients appear sicker than equivalently healthy patients in places with lower diagnostic intensity.
This matters partly because standard insurance-based health metrics are used to adjust payments for insurers or providers to account for the apparent differences in the health of the patients they serve. But now, those standard metrics may need some revising.
"The idea of risk-adjusted payments is to create a level playing field so providers are not penalized for serving sicker or harder-to-treat patients, and insurers are not penalized for covering them," says
The paper, "Adjusting Risk Adjustment -- Accounting for Variation in Diagnostic Intensity," is being published this week in the
The current study covers all 306 hospital referral regions (HRRs) across the
That previous analysis showed that about half the regional difference in
That first analysis arrived at its conclusions by examining
In the newly published paper, the researchers again examine what happens when
The new study shows that when people move to areas of the country where providers have a greater diagnostic intensity, the risk scores of patients -- which are supposed to reflect underlying health -- increase.
And while the general problem of geographic variation in diagnostic intensity had been recognized by previous researchers, the new study for the first time devises a solution that could be applied to this problem in practice.
"This work develops a new measure [that] provides practitioners and researchers with place-specific measures of diagnostic intensity that can be used to correct that sort of bias in these measures," Hull says.
The map that Finkelstein and her colleagues have built shows some notable national trends. Medical providers in the Northeast, the deep South, and most of
The study also helps illuminate contrasts between specific places in the
But as the new study shows,
"Our findings suggest that people in
Keywords for this news article include: Health Policy,
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