National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report
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AHRQ Research Studies Date
Topics
- Children/Adolescents (1)
- Dental and Oral Health (1)
- Education: Continuing Medical Education (1)
- Education: Patient and Caregiver (1)
- Healthcare Costs (1)
- Healthcare Delivery (1)
- Mortality (1)
- Outcomes (1)
- Patient-Centered Outcomes Research (1)
- Patient Safety (2)
- Provider: Health Personnel (2)
- (-) Provider Performance (8)
- Public Reporting (1)
- Quality Improvement (2)
- Quality Indicators (QIs) (3)
- Quality Measures (5)
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- Surgery (2)
- Workforce (1)
AHRQ Research Studies
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Research Studies is a compilation of published research articles funded by AHRQ or authored by AHRQ researchers.
Results
1 to 8 of 8 Research Studies DisplayedDill JS, Morgan JC, Weiner B
Frontline health care workers and perceived career mobility: do high-performance work practices make a difference?
This study examined how high-performance work practices (HPWPs) that focus on career development are related to an individuals' perceived mobility with their current employer, and also examined the relationships between perceived mobility, job satisfaction, and turnover intent. The findings suggest that tuition remission and educational release time positively predict perceived mobility, while measures of perceived organizational support in one's current position and perceived supervisor support for career development are also significant predictors of perceived mobility. Additionally, perceived mobility is a significant predictor of job satisfaction and intent to stay with current employer.
AHRQ-funded; HS000032.
Citation: Dill JS, Morgan JC, Weiner B .
Frontline health care workers and perceived career mobility: do high-performance work practices make a difference?
Health Care Manage Rev 2014 Oct-Dec;39(4):318-28. doi: 10.1097/HMR.0b013e31829fcbfd.
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Keywords: Provider: Health Personnel, Provider Performance, Workforce
Hussey PS, Luft HS, McNamara P
AHRQ Author: McNamara P
Public reporting of provider performance at a crossroads in the United States: summary of current barriers and recommendations on how to move forward.
The authors presented a vision statement and 10 recommendations for public reports to achieve their potential for engaging and informing consumers.
AHRQ-authored; AHRQ-funded.
Citation: Hussey PS, Luft HS, McNamara P .
Public reporting of provider performance at a crossroads in the United States: summary of current barriers and recommendations on how to move forward.
Med Care Res Rev 2014 Oct;71(5 Suppl):5s-16s. doi: 10.1177/1077558714535980.
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Keywords: Education: Patient and Caregiver, Quality of Care, Provider: Health Personnel, Provider Performance, Public Reporting
Bevans KB, Moon J, Carle AC
Patient reported outcomes as indicators of pediatric health care quality.
The authors described and illustrated in case examples the functions, benefits, and challenges of patient-reported outcomes applications. They concluded that pediatric patient-reported outcomes are increasingly recognized as valuable indicators of health care quality in the clinical environment and as measures of organization- and provider-level performance.
AHRQ-funded; HS020408.
Citation: Bevans KB, Moon J, Carle AC .
Patient reported outcomes as indicators of pediatric health care quality.
Acad Pediatr 2014 Sep-Oct;14(5 Suppl):S90-6. doi: 10.1016/j.acap.2014.06.002..
Keywords: Children/Adolescents, Quality of Care, Children/Adolescents, Quality Indicators (QIs), Quality Measures, Provider Performance
Hockenberry JM, Helmchen LA
The nature of surgeon human capital depreciation.
The authors estimated how temporal breaks affect surgeons' performance of coronary artery bypass grafting (CABG). They found that a surgeon's additional day away from the operating room raised patients' inpatient mortality by up to 0.067 percentage points but reduced total hospitalization costs by up to 0.59 percentage points, and among emergent patients treated by high-volume providers, an additional day away raised mortality risk by 0.398 percentage points but reduced cost by up to 1.4 percentage points. They concluded that their results are consistent with the hypothesis that as temporal distance increases, surgeons are less likely to recognize and address life-threatening complications.
AHRQ-funded; HS019743.
Citation: Hockenberry JM, Helmchen LA .
The nature of surgeon human capital depreciation.
J Health Econ 2014 Sep;37:70-80. doi: 10.1016/j.jhealeco.2014.06.001.
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Keywords: Healthcare Costs, Mortality, Provider Performance, Surgery
Maggard-Gibbons M
The use of report cards and outcome measurements to improve the safety of surgical care: the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program.
This review summarized the history of American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Project and its components, and described the evidence that feeding outcomes back to providers, along with real-time comparisons with other hospital rates, leads to quality improvement, better patient outcomes, cost savings and overall improved patient safety.
AHRQ-funded; 2902007100621.
Citation: Maggard-Gibbons M .
The use of report cards and outcome measurements to improve the safety of surgical care: the American College of Surgeons National Surgical Quality Improvement Program.
BMJ Qual Saf 2014 Jul;23(7):589-99. doi: 10.1136/bmjqs-2013-002223..
Keywords: Quality Improvement, Quality Indicators (QIs), Quality Measures, Quality of Care, Surgery, Patient Safety, Outcomes, Patient-Centered Outcomes Research, Provider Performance
Arora VM, Berhie S, Horwitz LI
Using standardized videos to validate a measure of handoff quality: the handoff mini-clinical examination exercise.
The researchers report the results of the development of a shorter Handoff Mini-Clinical Examination Exercise (CEX), along with the formal establishment of its construct validity, namely its ability to distinguish between levels of performance in 3 domains of handoff quality. They were able to demonstrate evidence that the Handoff Mini-CEX can draw reliable and valid conclusions regarding handoff performance by physicians in U.S. hospitals.
AHRQ-funded; HS018278
Citation: Arora VM, Berhie S, Horwitz LI .
Using standardized videos to validate a measure of handoff quality: the handoff mini-clinical examination exercise.
J Hospital Med. 2014 Jul;9(7):441-6. doi: 10.1002/jhm.2185.
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Keywords: Provider Performance, Quality Measures, Quality Improvement, Quality of Care, Education: Continuing Medical Education, Patient Safety
Paddock SM
Statistical benchmarks for health care provider performance assessment: a comparison of standard approaches to a hierarchical Bayesian histogram-based method.
The author compares histogram-based statistical benchmarking to other more widely used statistical benchmarking methods to demonstrate whether and how their performance differs, both in terms of setting a performance benchmark and also in terms of which providers are identified as exceeding the performance benchmark. Her study uses publicly available data from 3,240 hospitals on two process-of-care measures.
AHRQ-funded; HS021860
Citation: Paddock SM .
Statistical benchmarks for health care provider performance assessment: a comparison of standard approaches to a hierarchical Bayesian histogram-based method.
Health Serv Res. 2014 Jun;49(3):1056-73. doi: 10.1111/1475-6773.12149..
Keywords: Quality of Care, Quality Measures, Provider Performance
Gibson G, Jurasic MM, Wehler CJ
Longitudinal outcomes of using a fluoride performance measure for adults at high risk of experiencing caries.
In this paper, the authors hypothesized that after the implementation of a performance measure regarding appropriate fluoride use, veterans at high risk of experiencing caries would require fewer new dental restorations than in the past. They found that, after use of the performance measure for four years, there were 8.6 percent fewer patients needing two or more restorations, a 10.8 percent decrease in the mean number of restorations, and a modest 3.4 percent fewer patients at high risk of experiencing caries who required new restorations after the initial 12-month period.
AHRQ-funded; HS019527.
Citation: Gibson G, Jurasic MM, Wehler CJ .
Longitudinal outcomes of using a fluoride performance measure for adults at high risk of experiencing caries.
J Am Dent Assoc 2014 May;145(5):443-51. doi: 10.14219/jada.2013.53.
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Keywords: Dental and Oral Health, Healthcare Delivery, Provider Performance, Quality Indicators (QIs), Quality Measures