Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

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Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change Aileen Simkins, Department of Health Co-Director of the Atkinson Review

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Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change Aileen Simkins, Department of Health Co-Director of the Atkinson Review. Context. UK measurement of public service healthcare output and productivity – Part 2 - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

Transcript of Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

Page 1: Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

Aileen Simkins, Department of HealthCo-Director of the Atkinson Review

Page 2: Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

Context

• UK measurement of public service healthcare output and productivity – Part 2

• Quality adjustments to series for healthcare output described earlier by Chris Little

• Quality adjustments developed by DH; used by ONS in Health Productivity article but not in National Accounts

• Development programme

Page 3: Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

ONS Health Productivity Oct 2004

80

85

90

95

100

105

110

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003

Output w ithout quality; inputs: drugs deflated by cost of all items; capitalservices; missing years estimated as average of last 3 years

Output w ithout quality; inputs: drugs deflated by Paasche Price Index;capital consumption; missing years estimated as previous year

Page 4: Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

DH Press Release Oct 04

John Reid (Secretary of State for Health) says

“ it is absurd to measure NHS output without taking account of quality”

Page 5: Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

Quality as part of NHS Output• How many domains of quality?

– Health gain– Patient experience

• What can we measure?• How can we link quality measures to the NHS

output index?• How should we weight different aspects of

quality?• How valid is a partial story?

Page 6: Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

DH Work on Quality Adjusted Output

• York/NIESR research commissioned 2004

• Parallel DH work during 2005

• DH paper Accounting for Quality Change published Dec 2005, with research report

• Used in 2nd ONS Health Productivity article Feb 2006

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Accounting for Quality Change

Average over last 5 years:• Value of health 1.5%• Value weight for statins 0.81%• York/NIESR adjustment 0.17%• Patient experience* 0.07%• Blood pressure control * 0.05%• Heart attack survival 0.01%Total ** 2.68% Quality adjusted output growth 6.29%

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ONS Health Productivity 2006

80

85

90

95

100

105

110

1995 1996 1997 1998 1999 2000 2001 2002 2003 2004

Output w ith quality and value of health; inputs: drugs deflated by cost of allitems; capital consumption, direct labour method

Output w ith quality and value of health; inputs: drugs deflated by PaaschePrice Index; capital services, indirect labour method

Page 9: Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

York/NIESR Research 0.17%

• Ideal method is value weighted output index, not cost weighted activity index

• Algebra takes account of multiple aspects of quality and their value to patients – e.g. health gain (QALYs)

• Interim formula uses cost weights with mortality after hospital treatment + estimate for health gain if not dead

• Waiting time – interim formula measures as deferred benefit (discounted)

Page 10: Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

Quality Adjusted Life Years

t0 t1 t2 t3

Health Status

h=1

()oht

*()ht*h

oh

Ideally we want to measure the area under the curveBefore and after measures are a reasonable approximation (?)

Page 11: Health Quality Indicators, Value of Health: Accounting for Quality Change

Value Weight for Statins 0.81%

• Statin prescriptions rising fast (so positive output growth in CWAI)

• Value per prescription, in QALYs, can be shown to be greater than cost

• Work based on epidemiological research – lives saved, less morbidity

• Value weight is £115 v cost £30 (assuming £30,000 per QALY)

• So using value weight raises output growth even further

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Improving blood pressure control 0.05%

• GP Contract Quality and Outcomes Framework• First data set Sept 2005 – no time series yet• QRESEARCH data on 400+ practices (3m patients)

– quarterly measures of many QOF indicators, pre-contract

• Prevalence rates and comorbidity rates• Examined data for blood pressure and cholesterol

control

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Hypertension: blood pressure control

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Key results Jan 2002 – Oct 2004

CHD

Blood pressure control Jan 02 60.4%

Blood pressure control Oct 04 78.3%

Annual rate of increase 10.4%

Hypertension

Blood pressure control Oct 01 44.6%

Blood pressure control July 04 63.0%

Annual rate of increase 22.4%

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Overall GP Quality Adjustment• Most patients (86%) don’t have CHD or

hypertension – assume no change in quality• Patients with hypertension and/or CHD also

see GP for other illnesses – weight as equally important as CHD/hypertension, no change

• Patients with CHD need wider treatment than blood pressure control – weight BP as 1/3

• Result: 1.1% a year for GMS as a whole• Raises NHS output by 0.14% a year

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Patient Experience 0.07%

• Survey programme set up NHS Plan 2000• Operated by Healthcare Commission• PSA target for national improvement in

measured patient experience • Separate surveys for inpatients, outpatients,

primary care, A&E – with 2 data sets each• Many questions; 5 domains

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Patient Experience Data

Domains Year 2001/2 2002/3 2003/4 2004/5 2005/6

Inpatient survey access and waiting 82 83 83 b a safe, high quality co-ordinated care 64 65 66 b a better information, more choice 67 68 68 b a building closer relationships 83 83 83 b a clean, friendly, comfortable place to be 78 78 77 b a Aggregate 74.8 75.1 75.4 b b

Outpatient survey access and waiting -- 70 70 69 -- safe, high quality co-ordinated care -- 83 83 82 -- better information, more choice -- 77 77 77 -- building closer relationships -- 86 86 86 -- clean, friendly, comfortable place to be -- 70 69 68 -- Aggregate -- 77.2 76.8 76.4 -- Figures in bold are actual data points. Figures not in bold are estimates. *: aggregate score calculated by taking average of first four domain scores. a : domain score based on actual data pointss to be published b : to be estimated / calculated when relevant data become available ‘--‘ : no survey carried out ‘n/a’ : domain not relevant for this survey

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Value of Health 1.5%

• Biggest single element; used first for education• Does not depend on NHS data – same every year• Atkinson Report Principle C

‘account should be taken of the complementarity between public and private output, allowing for the increased real value of public services in an economy with rising real GDP’

• E.g ‘rising real wage rates mean we attach a higher valuation to days lost through sickness absence’

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Establishing the Principles

• UKCeMGA consultation paper Sept 2006• Framework for quality adjustment – based on

Atkinson Report• Arguments on public/private

complementarity – two way• Effect depends on specific channels of

influence in each area of public spending• DH will await outcome of consultation and

further clarity

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DH Development Work

• Aiming for AfQC 2 in winter 2006/7• Improvements on volume series (hospital, GP)• ? Use ‘avoidable deaths’ instead of ’30 day mortality• Discussion of functional form – additive not

multiplicative, how to weight different domains• Wider, longer analysis of primary care clinical

outcomes• Re-analysis of patient experience• New quality indicators (e.g. discharge to normal

residence after stroke)• New value weight for smoking cessation• Progress on routine measurement of patient

reported outcomes

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Value and Validity of Quality Adjusted Output Measures

• Focus on attributable impact on outcomes and quality change

• Data incomplete; biased towards areas of attention / improvement

• Development work by DH – partial?• Techniques new, untried, difficult • UKCeMGA in position to set standards, lead

development work, assure independent view• External consultation important – health Nov 06 based on Dec 05 paper