Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1074843 Health Outcomes Research in Medicine 2011 8 Pages PDF
Abstract

BackgroundThe use of electronic health records to conduct comparative effectiveness studies requires accurate measure of severity of patients’ illness.ObjectivesThis brief report provides data on relative accuracy of claims-based severity indices for childhood diseases.MeasuresWe compared the accuracy of All Patient Refined Diagnosis-Related Groups (APR-DRG), All Payer Severity-adjusted Diagnosis-Related Groups (APS-DRG), Alemi and Walters Severity across Episodes of Illness, and count of diagnoses.MethodsThe accuracy of each measure was calculated using the percent of deviance explained in mortality and percent of variation explained in length of stay (a surrogate measure of resource utilization).SubjectsData were obtained from the 2006 Kid’s Inpatient Database of the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. We examined data on 3.1 million patients across 38 states.ResultsAlemi and Walters’ formula-based severity score explained 34% of variation in length of stay and 32% of variation in mortality. This index was more accurate than other indices, especially in predicting mortality, where it was 5-fold more accurate than APS-DRG and 3-fold more accurate than APR-DRG. The difference in accuracy was not only statistically significant but also large enough that it could change conclusions of comparative effectiveness studies.

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