1. Risk adjustment and public reporting on home health care
- Author
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Murtaugh, Christopher M., Peng, Timothy, and Aykan, Hakan
- Subjects
United States. Department of Health and Human Services ,Medical research ,Home care services industry -- Quality management ,Medical law ,Pain -- Care and treatment ,Urinary incontinence -- Care and treatment -- Risk factors ,Evidence-based medicine ,Social service -- Quality management ,Health care reform ,Medical care, Cost of ,Medicine, Experimental ,Health insurance industry ,Patients -- Care and treatment ,Home care ,Medicare -- Quality management ,Drugs -- Prescribing ,Medicaid ,Risk assessment ,Home care services -- Quality management ,Medical care -- Quality management ,Business ,Health care industry ,University of Colorado Denver - Abstract
Risk adjustment is a critical tool in public reporting of quality measures. Its aim is to level the playing field so that providers serving different patients can be meaningfully compared. We used a theory and evidence-based approach to develop risk-adjustment models for the 10 publicly reported home health quality measures and compared their performance with current models developed using a data-driven stepwise approach. Overall, the quality ratings for most agencies were similar regardless of approach. Theory and evidence-based models have the potential to simplify risk adjustment, and thereby improve provider and consumer understanding and confidence in public reporting., INTRODUCTION Medicare is the single largest payer for home health care with expenditures exceeding $10 billion in 2003 (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, 2005). The benefit covers part-time or [...]
- Published
- 2007