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J Am Coll Cardiol, 2005; 45:1147-1156, doi:10.1016/j.jacc.2005.03.011 © 2005 by the American College of Cardiology Foundation |
| Abstract |
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Key Words: ACC/AHA Performance Measures cardiovascular diseases healthcare quality policy making
The American College of Cardiology (ACC) and the American Heart Association (AHA) have developed a multifaceted strategy to facilitate the process of improving the quality of cardiovascular care. The initial phase of this effort was to create clinical practice guidelines that carefully review and synthesize the available evidence to better guide patient care. As articulated in a recent overview of the guidelines process, the creation of guidelines is but one component of the ACCs and the AHAs commitment to improving the quality of cardiovascular care (2,3). Because guidelines are written in a spirit of suggesting diagnostic and/or therapeutic interventions for patients in most circumstances, a significant amount of judgment by clinicians is required to adapt the guidelines to the care of individual patients. Accordingly, the ACC/AHA guideline recommendations are generated with varying degrees of confidence based on the available evidence. Occasionally, the evidence supporting a particular structural aspect or process of care is so strong that failure to perform such actions reduces the likelihood that optimal patient outcomes will occur. Quantifying adherence to such aspects of care can therefore serve as a direct measure of the quality of care provided (or at least some important components of that quality) and as a foundation for quality improvement. In addition, certain outcomes may be so closely associated with the quality of care provided that they also can be used to measure healthcare quality. Creating mechanisms for measuring these opportunities to quantify healthcare quality in the course of routine practice is an important and pressing challenge.
This statement describes the methodology by which the ACC/AHA Task Force on Performance Measures develops performance measures. By clearly articulating the process by which performance measures are created, it is hoped that an understanding of the logic of these measures may be better appreciated by their users.
The applications of performance measures are designed to allow a transparent discussion of the quality of health care. Performance measures are not intended to be an end but rather a means for measuring and improving care. Specifically, punitive consequences such as restricting privileges, contracting selectively, or instituting penalties based on the performance of health systems or individual caregivers would undermine efforts to improve quality, particularly because a natural consequence of such efforts would be for clinicians and healthcare systems to manipulate the assessment process so that their performance appears better than it actually is. The intent of measuring performance is instead to allow healthcare providers to learn from one another how systems may be redesigned so that needed processes of care are applied uniformly to patients who are the most likely to benefit.
The development and implementation of ACC/AHA performance measures is a multiphase process, consisting of 3 basic phases that are inherent in building a performance measurement system: construction of the measurement set, assessment of the feasibility and reliability of data collection, and measurement of clinicians performance. To avoid pitfalls in application, measurement, and interpretation, the Task Force identified key methodological areas associated with each phase that should be considered in developing and implementing ACC/AHA performance measurement sets.
Analytic issues associated with evaluating and/or monitoring providers via performance data are not discussed in this statement, although the Task Force recognizes these issues to be critical to any measurement system. The latter portion of this statement provides an overview of performance measure development and implementation (Table 1).
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| Phase I: constructing measurement sets |
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Task 1: defining the target population and observational period. Quantifying the quality of care often is centered on a specific disease or its treatment. Thus, performance measures are designed to assess the care of a cohort of patients and, often, specific subsets of patients with a given disease. Accurately defining the target population for a performance measurement system is critical to ensuring the validity of these quality measures. By being concise in defining the target population, excessive inclusion and exclusion criteria can be avoided, and implementation can be more practical. Examples may include patients discharged from a hospital with heart failure, patients receiving procedures in specific clinical settings, or the treatment of acute or chronic aspects of a disease.
Two dimensions of time are relevant to performance measurement. One dimension is the "period of care" for an individual patient, during which certain care processes would be expected to occur. The second dimension is the "period of observation," during which a provider treats a number of individual patients. The period of care has implications for the specific aspects of care that are relevant and can be measured (see task 4). Under some circumstances, restrictions may be required to collect complete data. For example, a physician practice group may be interested in assessing the quality of ambulatory care for patients with heart failure 1 year after an initial diagnosis was made. In this instance, the target population consists of patients with heart failure, and the period of care is 1 year after diagnosis. An additional restriction that patients are continuously enrolled during the observational period may be required to obtain accurate information during the entire period of care.
The period of observation for the target population is the time frame during which sufficient cases accrue to provide reasonably accurate information about quality. The window of time selected has implications for both the number of cases that are available for measurement and the specific aspects of care that are relevant. For example, observational periods may be as short as 6 months or as long as 3 years, depending on the volume of cases within a practice. As longer periods of observation are considered, changes in technology and delays in providing analyses may limit the relevance of the data collected.
Clear, concise, and implementable definitions of the target population and the observational period that will become the foundation of the performance measurement set are needed. In addition, the ongoing efforts of the ACC/AHA Task Force on Clinical Data Standards (4,5) can provide data definitions for important clinical variables that are related to performance measurement. A sample framework for defining a target population is provided in Table 2.
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Task 3: synthesizing and reviewing the literature. The goal of task 3 is to identify a set of indicators that are likely to improve quality. This is accomplished by reviewing summaries of the evidence-based literature (ie, guidelines) and existing performance measures from other organizations. The scientific foundation of clinical medicine is expanding rapidly. Because performance measures imply that adherence to these measures is a direct reflection of the quality of care provided, it is essential that a thorough review and synthesis of the medical literature be conducted. The critical issues that should be considered when reviewing the literature include the following:
A review of the medical literature also should acknowledge the expense of implementing performance measurement. As such, it is recommended that writing groups consider pursuing the creation of performance measures for only those aspects of care with the greatest likelihood of providing meaningful benefit.
As the foundation for the scientific evidence that underpins the performance measurement set, the appropriate ACC/AHA Practice Guidelines that are relevant to the topic with which the writing group has been charged should be reviewed. In addition, the writing group should perform or have access to an environmental scan of additional national or international performance measures for the condition of interest. Finally, the writing group will benefit by familiarizing itself with any pending revisions of relevant guidelines. Ideally, performance measurement sets would be released at the same time that guidelines revisions are published.
Clinical practice guidelines
Clinical practice guidelines are particularly rich sources of potential performance measures. The writing group should have copies of the relevant ACC/AHA Clinical Practice Guidelines at its disposal. In the event that other guidelines have been written on the same topic, the writing group should be informed and should have an opportunity to review these as well. The following steps are recommended:
In general, ACC/AHA Class I and III indications for therapy identify potential dimensions of care and processes for performance measurement; however, not all Class I and III guidelines recommendations should be selected for performance measurement. Specific considerations may include the following:
In general, reviewing clinical guidelines annually or biannually is highly recommended. This recommendation reflects the rapid pace at which knowledge is being generated (3). The role of performance measures writing groups is not to perform a primary evaluation of the medical literature; this task should be undertaken by guidelines writing groups. It is appropriateand recommendedthat performance measures writing groups work collaboratively with guidelines writing groups so that the guidelines may be written with a degree of specificity that supports performance measurement and that new knowledge can be incorporated rapidly into performance measurement.
Existing performance measures
An additional important source for identifying potential performance measures is existing performance measures endorsed by other groups. Therefore, a review of existing performance measures being promulgated by other professional organizations should be conducted. Where possible, synergy with existing performance measures must be created so that the burden of data collection may be minimized when reporting to the different assessors of quality. Upon completing an environmental scan of performance measures on the specific clinical topic, the writing group should create a table describing the performance measurement sets reviewed and detailing the measure specifications for specific target populations. Table 3 provides an example of a systematic method to organize information collected from tasks 1 to 3.
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Defining the period of care
The writing group should specify the time period during which each performance measure is to be evaluated. For example, some processes of care are required to be carried out within 24 hours of admission, others before discharge, and still others within 3 months of discharge. The writing group should give due consideration to the circumstances of routine clinical practice when specifying the period of care. For example, although aspirin should be prescribed within 24 hours of a heart attack and beta-blocker use should be started during initial heart failure hospitalization, maximizing the beta-blocker dosage may be better completed in the outpatient setting rather than at the time of hospitalizing a patient for decompensated heart failure. In the case of a heart attack, it would be appropriate to assess performance upon hospital discharge. In the case of maximizing beta-blocker dosage in patients with heart failure, however, information may not be feasibly collected until 3 months after discharge.
Specifying the denominator
The denominator of a performance measure refers to the target population that is eligible for the assessment of each measure. In defining the denominator, the writing group provides direction for data to be collected and identifies consistent sources for information. Occasionally, the denominator will exclude subsets of patients within the target population and the dimension of care for the performance measure. This often arises when physicians provide a rationale for not applying the performance measure or when emerging evidence dictates that an alternative treatment strategy may be appropriate but evidence is insufficient to support that treatment as satisfying the performance measure. For example, in 2003, evidence was insufficient to recommend that angiotensin-receptor blockade be used for all patients with congestive heart failure, particularly if they could tolerate angiotensin-converting enzyme (ACE) inhibitor medications. If a physician recommends angiotensin-receptor blockade, however, then treatment with an ACE inhibitor may not be necessary. In this situation, when sufficient uncertainty exists in the medical literature to support the use of angiotensin-receptor blockers as an alternative to ACE inhibitors, then patients treated with angiotensin-receptor blockers may be excluded from the denominator so that they neither count as fulfilling nor as not fulfilling the performance measure.
Clarity of the denominator is needed so that the selected performance measures are clinically relevant. A tension exists between specificity and inclusivity of the denominator. When considering the most appropriate denominator, the writing group should entertain issues of the populations magnitude (ie, the larger the number of eligible patients, the more important the performance measurement set), variability in care, and the association with outcome of greater adherence to the potential performance measure.
Specifying the numerator
The numerator of a performance measure indicates the subset of the denominator that has had the performance measure met. Patients from the denominator enter the numerator if documentation that the performance measure has been executed is available. Alternatively, if the quality measure is continuous (eg, blood pressure), then the performance measure can be either a mean (or median or other summary) across the patients who are eligible for the measure or dichotomized as meeting a prespecified desirable goal. Table 4 provides an example of the definition of a performance measure for a target population of adults discharged alive with a principal diagnosis of acute myocardial infarction.
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To assist in the selection process, it is recommended that the writing group pursue a formal strategy of evaluating potential measures. A systematic determination of the usefulness, specification, and likely feasibility of implementation will focus discussion on the advantages and disadvantages of each measure. Determining measure feasibility, a critical component of the ACC/AHAs multiphasic approach to building a performance-measurement system, is described in phase II. Such a determination can be assessed through a survey of writing group members and the parent committee of the ACC/AHA Task Force on Performance Measures. In addition, when resources permit, extension of the survey to practitioners and healthcare systems would be an excellent strategy for assessing the feasibility of a measurement set before its initial publication. A sample survey form (Figure 2) and a guide for its completion (Figure 3) are presented here. Rules for selecting performance measures should be decided upon before the survey is completed.
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At the completion of phase I, the initial work of the performance measures writing group draws to a close; however, additional work, as described in phases II and III, is necessary. At the conclusion of phases II and III, it is expected that the writing group will reconvene to review initial results, troubleshoot observed difficulties, and, if necessary, refine the measures. The writing group also will convene to update those measures when ACC/AHA guidelines are updated. These steps necessitate that the writing groups for performance measures serve as "living committees" so that reviews and revisions of both the specifications of existing measures and the introduction of new measures can occur in a timely manner, again mirroring the evolution of current guidelines committees (3).
Phase II: determining measure feasibility. After potential measures are selected, formal evaluations of the feasibility of assessing performance with each measure should be pursued. Within the target population, the writing group must consider 2 levels of assessment: (1) how well they can identify their sample and (2) how well they can measure the data items for each member of the sample. Identifying a test population depends on the design (eg, prospective data collection or retrospective data collection, inpatient or ambulatory-based cohorts) and the intended implementation of the performance measures in clinical practice. During this evaluation process, explicit efforts to define the sensitivity and specificity of the sample identification procedure should be determined. For example, if administrative data will be used to initially identify the sample, then medical records data or direct patient assessments may be used to validate the diagnosis in patients identified as having the disease and its absence in a population of patients not identified as having the target condition.
Once the sample is identified and a provider or providers associated with each patient determined, the Task Force recommends that the validity, reliability, and completeness of each data item be assessed. The methodology for assessing feasibility depends on the available data sources. For example, if medical records data are used, then the frequency of missing patient records should be recorded. In addition, the reliability of medical record chart abstraction should be studied and assessed. If items cannot be abstracted with sufficient reliability, then dropping the measure from the measurement set should be considered.
Alternatively, if patient survey data are used (eg, to quantify patients health status and compliance with recommendations such as exercise or smoking cessation), then the frequency and distribution of patient nonresponse should be assessed. The time between an index-defining event and surveying a patient should be assessed to determine whether it is feasible for patients to recall needed information. Individual items within the survey should be examined in terms of completeness and clinical logic, reliability, and responsiveness so that the results are a valid reflection of patient outcomes.
If administrative data are used, then the lag time between patient events and recording the events in the files should be assessed. When data are missing, especially those based on diagnostic tests, analytic methods based on realistic scientific assumptions should be used to make inferences.
Phase III: measuring performance. Because the choice of a performance measurement system ultimately depends on its intended use, the Task Force recommends that researchers decide a priori both the reporting unit and the number and range of measures (many measures, a composite measure, or both) to be reported. Although all measurements will be made at the patient level, it is important to determine whether the reporting unit will be at the individual physician level, the group level, the health plan level, and so forth. The ACC/AHA Task Force on Performance Measures intends for its measurement sets to be used by physicians to improve performance at the physician level. It is recognized, however, that for accurate estimates of performance to be obtained, a sufficient number and broad array of cases will be required to prove that providers have indeed "improved." Furthermore, many interventions needed to improve performance will be system-level interventions, and aggregating individual provider data will be needed both to assess the performance of systems of care and to monitor changes in performance over time. Assistance from individuals trained in statistics is critical for the successful aggregation of such data.
| Conclusion |
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An important consideration, although not discussed in this statement, in implementing a performance measurement relates to the frequency of measurement. This is a particularly challenging issue and reflects a tension between the desire to provide rapid feedback on the one hand and a need to have accurate data on the other. The "accuracy" of data is a design issue that is affected by the volume of eligible cases, the variability in clinician performance, and the anticipated changes over time. Consequently, the timing of data reporting is likely to be greatly influenced by the intended purpose of such reporting. If reporting is for the sole use of the practitioner, then more frequent reporting intervals are appropriate, under the presumption that every case is an opportunity to improve the quality of care; however, if other credentialing, purchasing, or regulating entities are to review such reports, then greater statistical accuracy is needed and longer intervals between reporting periods are indicated.
It is hoped and anticipated that through the implementation of this methodological framework, new sets of performance measures will be created for cardiovascular care, and that through their use, the quality of cardiovascular care will improve (7).
| Appendix |
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| Footnotes |
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The ACC/AHA Task Force on Performance Measures makes every effort to avoid any actual or potential conflicts of interest that might arise as a result of an outside relationship or personal interest of a member of the writing committee. Specifically, all members of the writing committee are required to provide disclosure statements of all such relationships that might be perceived as real or potential conflicts of interest. See Appendix for author disclosures for this document.
When citing this document, the American College of Cardiology Foundation and the American Heart Association would appreciate the following citation format: Spertus JA, Eagle KA, Krumholz HM, Mitchell KR, Normand ST. ACC/AHA methodology for the selection and creation of performance measures for quantifying the quality of cardiovascular care: a report of the ACC/AHA Task Force on Performance Measures. J Am Coll Cardiol 2005;45:114756.
Copies: This document is available on the World Wide Web sites of the American College of Cardiology (www.acc.org) and the American Heart Association (www.americanheart.org) and is printed in the April 5, 2005 issue of the Journal of the American College of Cardiology and the April 5, 2005 issue of Circulation. Single copies are available for $10.00 each by calling 1-800-253-4636 or writing to the American College of Cardiology Foundation, Resource Center, 9111 Old Georgetown Rd, Bethesda, MD 20814-1699. To purchase bulk reprints (specify reprint number, 71-0315): up to 999 copies, call 1-800-611-6083 (US only) or fax 413-665-2671; 1000 or more copies, call 214-706-1789, fax 214-691-6342, or e-mail mailto:pubauth{at}heart.org.
Permissions: Multiple copies, modification, alteration, enhancement, and/or distribution of this document are not permitted without the express permission of the American College of Cardiology Foundation. Please direct requests to mailto:copyright_permissions{at}acc.org.
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