Use of interval based quality indicators in blood pressure management to enhance quality of pay for performance incentives: comparison to two indicators from the Quality and Outcomes Framework

Research Paper

Thusitha Mabotuwana, Jim Warre

Abstract

BackgroundPay for performance incentives are becoming increasingly popular, but are typically based on only a single point-in-time measurement as an indicator of chronic condition management. Aims To determine the association between three time-interval based indicators of suboptimal blood pressure (BP) control and two point-in-time indicators from the UK Quality and Outcomes Framework (QOF): BP5 (the percentage of patients with hypertension in whom the last BP in the previous nine months was _150/90) and DM12 (the percentage of patients with diabetes in whom the last BP in the previous 15 months was _145/85). MethodsWe extracted classification data and BP measurements from four New Zealand general practices with 4260 to 6130 enrolled patients. Data were analysed for three indicators with respect to a nine-month evaluation period for patients with hypertension and a 15-month period for patients with diabetes: (1) two or more consistently high BP measurements spaced over _90 days, (2) a high BP measurement followed by a lapse of >120 days in BP measurement and (3) no BP measurement for >180 days.Results For the four practices, 65–81% of the patients satisfied BP5 and 59–68% of patients satisfiedDM12. Of the hypertension patients satisfying BP5, 31% (95% CI: 28–33%) failed at least one of the three interval based indicators; 42% (95% CI: 39–46%) of the diabetes patients satisfying DM12 failed at least one of the three interval based indicators. ConclusionConsidering only a point-in-time controlled BP measurement provides an incomplete view of the quality of BP management in patients with hypertension or diabetes over a period of time. Quality in Primary Care Volume:18 Issue:2 Email updates  

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