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Clinical Operations Variables are Associated with Blood Pressure Outcomes

Authors :
Nancy R. Kressin
Michael K. Paasche-Orlow
Steven D. Pizer
Arlene S. Ash
Christopher W. Shanahan
Jeroan J. Allison
Karen E. Lasser
William G. Adams
Aaron Legler
Publication Year :
2015

Abstract

BACKGROUND Uncontrolled blood pressure (BP), among patients diagnosed and treated for the condition, remains an important clinical challenge; aspects of clinical operations could potentially be adjusted if they were associated with better outcomes. OBJECTIVES To assess clinical operations factors' effects on normalization of uncontrolled BP. RESEARCH DESIGN Observational cohort study. SUBJECTS Patients diagnosed with hypertension from a large urban clinical practice (2005-2009). MEASURES We obtained clinical data on BP, organized by person-month, and administrative data on primary care provider (PCP) staffing. We assessed the resolution of an episode of uncontrolled BP as a function of time-varying covariates including practice-level appointment volume, individual clinicians' appointment volume, overall practice-level PCP staffing, and number of unique PCPs. RESULTS Among the 7409 unique patients representing 50,403 person-months, normalization was less likely for the patients in whom the episode starts during months when the number of unique PCPs were high [the top quintile of unique PCPs was associated with a 9 percentage point lower probability of normalization (P

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....f8c367af2be6eed0e74e05867f073ec2