Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
4199099 Health Policy 2006 13 Pages PDF
Abstract

Context and objectivesThe objective of this study was to find factors that could explain high and low resource use outliers, by associating an explanatory analysis with a statistical analysis.MethodHigh resource use outliers were selected according to the following rule: 75th percentile + 1.5* inter-quartile range. Low resource use outliers were selected according to: 25th percentile − 1.5* inter-quartile range. The statistical approach was based on a multivariate analysis using logistic regression. A decision tree approach using predictors from this analysis (intensive care unit (ICU) stay, high severity of illness and social factors associated with longer length of stay) was also tested as a more intuitive tool for use by hospitals in focussing review efforts on “not explained” cost outliers.ResultsHigh resource use outliers accounted for 6.31% of the hospital stays versus 1.07% for low resource use outliers. The probability of a patient being a high resource use outlier was higher with an increase in the length of stay (odds ratios (OR) = 1.08), when the patient was treated in an intensive care unit (OR = 3.02), with a major or extreme severity of illness (OR = 1.46), and with the presence of social factors (OR = 1.44). The probability of being a low outlier is lower for older patients (OR = 0.98). The probability of being a low outlier is also lower without readmission within the year (OR = 0.55). The more intuitive decision tree method identified 92.26% of the cases identified through residuals of the regression model. One quarter of the high cost outliers were flagged for additional review (“not justified” on the basis of the model), with nearly three-quarters “justified” by clinical and social factors.ConclusionThe analysis of cost outliers can meet different aims (financing of justifiable outliers, improvement of the care process for the outliers not justifiable on medical or social grounds). The two methods are complementary, by proposing a statistical and a didactic approach to achieve the goal of high quality care using fewer resources.

Related Topics
Health Sciences Medicine and Dentistry Public Health and Health Policy
Authors
, , , ,