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Evaluating the effect of healthcare providers on the clinical path of heart failure patients through a semi-Markov, multi-state model.

Published version
Peer-reviewed

Type

Article

Change log

Authors

Gasperoni, Francesca  ORCID logo  https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1713-9477
Ieva, Francesca 
Paganoni, Anna Maria 
Jackson, Christopher H 
Sharples, Linda 

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Investigating similarities and differences among healthcare providers, on the basis of patient healthcare experience, is of interest for policy making. Availability of high quality, routine health databases allows a more detailed analysis of performance across multiple outcomes, but requires appropriate statistical methodology. METHODS: Motivated by analysis of a clinical administrative database of 42,871 Heart Failure patients, we develop a semi-Markov, illness-death, multi-state model of repeated admissions to hospital, subsequent discharge and death. Transition times between these health states each have a flexible baseline hazard, with proportional hazards for patient characteristics (case-mix adjustment) and a discrete distribution for frailty terms representing clusters of providers. Models were estimated using an Expectation-Maximization algorithm and the number of clusters was based on the Bayesian Information Criterion. RESULTS: We are able to identify clusters of providers for each transition, via the inclusion of a nonparametric discrete frailty. Specifically, we detect 5 latent populations (clusters of providers) for the discharge transition, 3 for the in-hospital to death transition and 4 for the readmission transition. Out of hospital death rates are similar across all providers in this dataset. Adjusting for case-mix, we could detect those providers that show extreme behaviour patterns across different transitions (readmission, discharge and death). CONCLUSIONS: The proposed statistical method incorporates both multiple time-to-event outcomes and identification of clusters of providers with extreme behaviour simultaneously. In this way, the whole patient pathway can be considered, which should help healthcare managers to make a more comprehensive assessment of performance.

Description

Keywords

Clustering, Decision making, Multi-state model, Nonparametric frailty, Aged, Aged, 80 and over, Bayes Theorem, Critical Pathways, Databases, Factual, Female, Health Personnel, Heart Failure, Hospitalization, Hospitals, Humans, Italy, Male, Middle Aged, Outcome Assessment, Health Care, Patient Discharge, Patient Readmission

Journal Title

BMC Health Serv Res

Conference Name

Journal ISSN

1472-6963
1472-6963

Volume Title

20

Publisher

Springer Science and Business Media LLC
Sponsorship
MRC (unknown)