期刊
MEDICAL CARE
卷 41, 期 6, 页码 753-760出版社
LIPPINCOTT WILLIAMS & WILKINS
DOI: 10.1097/00005650-200306000-00008
关键词
case-mix; pharmacy; veterans; risk adjustment
BACKGROUND. Although most widely used risk adjustment systems use diagnosis data to classify patients, there is growing interest in risk adjustment based on computerized pharmacy data. The Veterans Health Administration (VHA) is an ideal environment in which to test the efficacy of a pharmacy-based approach. OBJECTIVE. To examine the ability of RxRisk-V to predict concurrent and prospective costs of care in VHA and compare the performance of RxRisk-V to a simple age/gender model, the original RxRisk, and two leading diagnosis-based risk adjustment approaches: Adjusted Clinical Groups and Diagnostic Cost Groups/Hierarchical Condition Categories. METHODS. The study population consisted of 161,202 users of VHA services in Washington, Oregon, Idaho, and Alaska during fiscal years (FY) 1996 to 1998. We examined both concurrent and predictive model fit for two sequential 12-month periods (FY 98 and FY 99) with the patient-year as the unit of analysis, using split-half validation. RESULTS. Our results show that the Diagnostic Cost Group/Hierarchical Condition Categories model performs best (R-2 = 0.45) among concurrent cost models, followed by ADG (0.31), RxRisk-V (0.20), and age/sex model (0.01). However, prospective cost models other than age/sex showed comparable R-2: Diagnostic Cost Group/Hierarchical Condition Categories R-2 = 0.15, followed by ADG (0.12), RxRisk-V (0.12), and age/sex (0.01). CONCLUSIONS. RxRisk-V is a clinically relevant, open source risk adjustment system that is easily tailored to fit specific questions, populations, or needs. Although it does not perform better than diagnosis-based measures available on the market, it may provide a reasonable alternative to proprietary systems where accurate computerized pharmacy data are available.
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