The Quality of Care for Adults with Epilepsy: An Initial Glimpse Using the QUIET Measure
Date
2011-1-3
Authors
Pugh, Mary Jo
Berlowitz, Dan R.
Rao, Jaya K.
Shapiro, Gabriel
Avetisyan, Ruzan
Hanchate, Amresh
Jarrett, Kelli
Tabares, Jeffrey
Kazis, Lewis E.
Version
OA Version
Citation
Pugh, Mary Jo, Dan R Berlowitz, Jaya K Rao, Gabriel Shapiro, Ruzan Avetisyan, Amresh Hanchate, Kelli Jarrett, Jeffrey Tabares, Lewis E Kazis. "The quality of care for adults with epilepsy: an initial glimpse using the QUIET measure." BMC Health Services Research 11:1. (2011)
Abstract
BACKGROUND: We examined the quality of adult epilepsy care using the Quality Indicators in Epilepsy Treatment (QUIET) measure, and variations in quality based on the source of epilepsy care. METHODS: We identified 311 individuals with epilepsy diagnosis between 2004 and 2007 in a tertiary medical center in New England. We abstracted medical charts to identify the extent to which participants received quality indicator (QI) concordant care for individual QI's and the proportion of recommended care processes completed for different aspects of epilepsy care over a two year period. Finally, we compared the proportion of recommended care processes completed for those receiving care only in primary care, neurology clinics, or care shared between primary care and neurology providers. RESULTS: The mean proportion of concordant care by indicator was 55.6 (standard deviation = 31.5). Of the 1985 possible care processes, 877 (44.2%) were performed; care specific to women had the lowest concordance (37% vs. 42% [first seizure evaluation], 44% [initial epilepsy treatment], 45% [chronic care]). Individuals receiving shared care had more aspects of QI concordant care performed than did those receiving neurology care for initial treatment (53% vs. 43%; X2 = 9.0; p = 0.01) and chronic epilepsy care (55% vs. 42%; X2 = 30.2; p <0.001). CONCLUSIONS: Similar to most other chronic diseases, less than half of recommended care processes were performed. Further investigation is needed to understand whether a shared-care model enhances quality of care, and if so, how it leads to improvements in quality.
Description
License
Copyright 2011 Pugh et al; licensee BioMed Central Ltd. This is an Open Access article distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution License (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/2.0), which permits unrestricted use, distribution, and reproduction in any medium, provided the original work is properly cited.