Developing and Testing an Electronic Measure of Screening Colonoscopy Overuse in a Large Integrated Healthcare System
Adult
Aged, 80 and over
Male
Delivery of Health Care, Integrated
Veterans Health
Colonoscopy
Middle Aged
United States
3. Good health
United States Department of Veterans Affairs
03 medical and health sciences
Cross-Sectional Studies
0302 clinical medicine
Electronic Health Records
Humans
Female
Early Detection of Cancer
Aged
DOI:
10.1007/s11606-015-3569-y
Publication Date:
2016-03-07T15:40:39Z
AUTHORS (11)
ABSTRACT
Most existing performance measures focus on underuse of care, but there is growing interest in identifying and reducing overuse.We aimed to develop a valid and reliable electronic performance measure of overuse of screening colonoscopy in the Veterans Affairs Health Care System (VA), and to quantify overuse in VA.This was a cross-sectional study with multiple cross-sections.U.S. Veterans who underwent screening colonoscopy between 2011 and 2013.Overuse of screening colonoscopy, using a validated electronic measure developed by an expert workgroup.Compared to results obtained from manual record review, the electronic measure was highly specific (97 %) for overuse, but not sensitive (20 %). After exclusion of diagnostic and high-risk screening or surveillance procedures, the validated electronic measure identified 88,754 average-risk screening colonoscopies performed in VA during 2013. Of these, 20,530 (23 %) met the definition for probable (17 %) or possible (6 %) overuse. Substantial variation in colonoscopy overuse was noted between Veterans Integrated Care Networks (VISNs) and between facilities, with a nearly twofold difference between the maximum and minimum rates of overuse at the VISN level and a nearly eightfold difference at the facility level. Overuse at the VISN and facility level was relatively stable over time.Overuse of screening colonoscopy can be measured reliably and with high specificity using electronic data, and is common in a large integrated healthcare system. Overuse measures, such as those we have specified through a consensus workgroup process, could be combined with underuse measures to improve the appropriateness of colorectal cancer screening.
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