Hospital variation in patient-reported outcomes at the level of EQ-5D dimensions: evidence from England

Med Decis Making. 2013 Aug;33(6):804-18. doi: 10.1177/0272989X13482523. Epub 2013 Apr 30.

Abstract

Background: The English Department of Health has introduced routine collection of patient-reported outcome data for selected surgical procedures to facilitate patient choice and increase hospital accountability. However, using aggregate health outcome scores, such as EQ-5D utilities, for performance assessment purposes causes information loss and raises statistical and normative concerns.

Objectives: . For hip replacement surgery, we explore a) the change in patient-reported outcomes between baseline and follow-up on 5 health dimensions (EQ-5D), b) the extent to which treatment impact varies across hospitals, and c) the extent to which hospital performance on EQ-5D dimensions is correlated with performance on the EQ-5D utility index.

Methods: . We combine information on pre- and postoperative EQ-5D outcomes with routine inpatient data for the financial year 2009-2010. The sample consists of 21,000 patients in 153 hospitals. We employ hierarchical ordered probit risk-adjustment models that recognize the multilevel nature of the data and the response distributions. The treatment impact is modeled as a random coefficient that varies at the hospital level. We obtain hospital-specific empirical Bayes (EB) estimates of this coefficient. We estimate separate models for each EQ-5D dimension and the EQ-5D utility index and analyze correlations of EB estimates across these.

Results: . Hospital treatment is associated with improvements in all EQ-5D dimensions. Variability in treatment impact is most pronounced on the mobility and usual activities dimensions. Conversely, only pain/discomfort and anxiety/depression correlate well with performance measures based on utilities. This leads to different assessments of hospital performance across metrics.

Conclusions: . Our results indicate which hospitals are better than others in improving health across particular EQ-5D dimensions. We demonstrate the importance of evaluating dimensions of the EQ-5D separately for the purposes of hospital performance assessment.

Keywords: EQ-5D; hierarchical ordered probit; patient-reported outcomes (PRO); performance assessment; provider profiling; quality measurement.

Publication types

  • Research Support, Non-U.S. Gov't

MeSH terms

  • Data Collection*
  • England
  • Hospitals, Public*
  • Humans
  • Models, Theoretical
  • Outcome Assessment, Health Care*
  • State Medicine