A flexible approach to measure care coordination based on patient‑sharing networks

Standard

A flexible approach to measure care coordination based on patient‑sharing networks. / Engels, Alexander; Konnopka, Claudia; Henken, Espen; Härter, Martin; König, Hans-Helmut.

In: BMC MED RES METHODOL, Vol. 24, No. 1, 03.01.2024, p. 1.

Research output: SCORING: Contribution to journalSCORING: Journal articleResearchpeer-review

Harvard

APA

Vancouver

Bibtex

@article{9290c2533f4946bfa36027d170121d83,
title = "A flexible approach to measure care coordination based on patient‑sharing networks",
abstract = "BACKGROUND: Effective care coordination may increase clinical efficiency, but its measurement remains difficult. The established metric {"}care density{"} (CD) measures care coordination based on patient-sharing among physicians, but it may be too rigid to generalize across disorders and countries. Therefore, we propose an extension called fragmented care density (FCD), which allows varying weights for connections between different types of providers. We compare both metrics in their ability to predict hospitalizations due to schizophrenia.METHODS: We conducted a longitudinal cohort study based on German claims data from 2014 through 2017 to predict quarterly hospital admissions. 21,016 patients with schizophrenia from the federal state Baden-W{\"u}rttemberg were included. CD and FCD were calculated based on patient-sharing networks. The weights of FCD were optimized to predict hospital admissions during the first year of a 24-month follow-up. Subsequently, we employed likelihood ratio tests to assess whether adding either CD or FCD improved a baseline model with control variables for the second follow-up year.RESULTS: The inclusion of FCD significantly improved the baseline model, Χ2(1) = 53.30, p < 0.001. We found that patients with lower percentiles in FCD had an up to 21% lower hospitalization risk than those with median or higher values, whereas CD did not affect the risk.CONCLUSIONS: FCD is an adaptive metric that can weight provider relationships based on their relevance for predicting any outcome. We used it to better understand which medical specialties need to be involved to reduce hospitalization risk for patients with schizophrenia. As FCD can be modified for different health conditions and systems, it is broadly applicable and might help to identify barriers and promoting factors for effective collaboration.",
author = "Alexander Engels and Claudia Konnopka and Espen Henken and Martin H{\"a}rter and Hans-Helmut K{\"o}nig",
year = "2024",
month = jan,
day = "3",
doi = "10.1186/s12874-023-02106-0",
language = "English",
volume = "24",
pages = "1",
journal = "BMC MED RES METHODOL",
issn = "1471-2288",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",
number = "1",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - A flexible approach to measure care coordination based on patient‑sharing networks

AU - Engels, Alexander

AU - Konnopka, Claudia

AU - Henken, Espen

AU - Härter, Martin

AU - König, Hans-Helmut

PY - 2024/1/3

Y1 - 2024/1/3

N2 - BACKGROUND: Effective care coordination may increase clinical efficiency, but its measurement remains difficult. The established metric "care density" (CD) measures care coordination based on patient-sharing among physicians, but it may be too rigid to generalize across disorders and countries. Therefore, we propose an extension called fragmented care density (FCD), which allows varying weights for connections between different types of providers. We compare both metrics in their ability to predict hospitalizations due to schizophrenia.METHODS: We conducted a longitudinal cohort study based on German claims data from 2014 through 2017 to predict quarterly hospital admissions. 21,016 patients with schizophrenia from the federal state Baden-Württemberg were included. CD and FCD were calculated based on patient-sharing networks. The weights of FCD were optimized to predict hospital admissions during the first year of a 24-month follow-up. Subsequently, we employed likelihood ratio tests to assess whether adding either CD or FCD improved a baseline model with control variables for the second follow-up year.RESULTS: The inclusion of FCD significantly improved the baseline model, Χ2(1) = 53.30, p < 0.001. We found that patients with lower percentiles in FCD had an up to 21% lower hospitalization risk than those with median or higher values, whereas CD did not affect the risk.CONCLUSIONS: FCD is an adaptive metric that can weight provider relationships based on their relevance for predicting any outcome. We used it to better understand which medical specialties need to be involved to reduce hospitalization risk for patients with schizophrenia. As FCD can be modified for different health conditions and systems, it is broadly applicable and might help to identify barriers and promoting factors for effective collaboration.

AB - BACKGROUND: Effective care coordination may increase clinical efficiency, but its measurement remains difficult. The established metric "care density" (CD) measures care coordination based on patient-sharing among physicians, but it may be too rigid to generalize across disorders and countries. Therefore, we propose an extension called fragmented care density (FCD), which allows varying weights for connections between different types of providers. We compare both metrics in their ability to predict hospitalizations due to schizophrenia.METHODS: We conducted a longitudinal cohort study based on German claims data from 2014 through 2017 to predict quarterly hospital admissions. 21,016 patients with schizophrenia from the federal state Baden-Württemberg were included. CD and FCD were calculated based on patient-sharing networks. The weights of FCD were optimized to predict hospital admissions during the first year of a 24-month follow-up. Subsequently, we employed likelihood ratio tests to assess whether adding either CD or FCD improved a baseline model with control variables for the second follow-up year.RESULTS: The inclusion of FCD significantly improved the baseline model, Χ2(1) = 53.30, p < 0.001. We found that patients with lower percentiles in FCD had an up to 21% lower hospitalization risk than those with median or higher values, whereas CD did not affect the risk.CONCLUSIONS: FCD is an adaptive metric that can weight provider relationships based on their relevance for predicting any outcome. We used it to better understand which medical specialties need to be involved to reduce hospitalization risk for patients with schizophrenia. As FCD can be modified for different health conditions and systems, it is broadly applicable and might help to identify barriers and promoting factors for effective collaboration.

U2 - 10.1186/s12874-023-02106-0

DO - 10.1186/s12874-023-02106-0

M3 - SCORING: Journal article

C2 - 38172777

VL - 24

SP - 1

JO - BMC MED RES METHODOL

JF - BMC MED RES METHODOL

SN - 1471-2288

IS - 1

ER -