Background: Syndromic surveillance systems are plagued by high false-positive rates. In chronic disease monitoring, investigators have identified several factors that predict the accuracy of case definitions based on diagnoses in administrative data, and some have even incorporated these predictors into novel case detection methods, resulting in a significant improvement in case definition accuracy. Based on findings from these studies, we sought to identify physician, patient, encounter, and billing characteristics associated with the positive predictive value (PPV) of case definitions for 5 syndromes (fever, gastrointestinal, neurological, rash, and respiratory (including influenza-like illness)).
Methods: The study sample comprised 4,330 syndrome-positive visits from the claims of 1,098 randomly-selected physicians working in Quebec, Canada in 2005-2007. For each visit, physician-facilitated chart review was used to assess whether the same syndrome was present in the medical chart (gold standard). We used multivariate logistic regression analyses to estimate the association between claim-chart agreement about the presence of a syndrome and physician, patient, encounter, and billing characteristics.
Results: The likelihood of the medical chart agreeing with the physician claim about the presence of a syndrome was higher when the treating physician had billed many visits for the same syndrome recently (ORper 10 visit, 1.05; 95% CI, 1.01-1.08), had a lower workload (ORper 10 claims, 0.93; 95% CI, 0.90-0.97), and when the patient was younger (ORper 5 years of age, 0.96; 95% CI, 0.94-0.97), and less socially deprived (ORmost versus least deprived, 0.76; 95% CI, 0.60-0.95).
Conclusions: Many physician, patient, encounter, and billing characteristics associated with the PPV of surveillance case definition are accessible to public health, and could be used to reduce false-positive alerts by surveillance systems, either by focusing on the data most likely to be accurate, or by adjusting the observed data for known biases in diagnosis reporting and performing surveillance using the adjusted values.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/1471-2458-12-166 | DOI Listing |
JAMA Dermatol
December 2024
Department of Dermatology, Duke University, Durham, North Carolina.
Importance: Clinical productivity measures may incentivize clinical care to specific patient populations and thus perpetuate inequitable care. Before the 2021 Medicare physician fee schedule changes, outpatient dermatology encounters for patients who were younger, female, and races other than White systematically generated fewer work relative value units (wRVUs).
Objective: To examine the association of patient race, age, and sex with wRVUs generated by outpatient dermatology encounters after 2021.
PLoS One
December 2024
Department of Pediatrics, Texas Children's Hospital, Baylor College of Medicine, Houston, Texas, United States of America.
Objectives: Congenital cytomegalovirus disease (cCMV) can have significant sensory and neurodevelopmental sequelae throughout childhood. Many of these sequalae are consistent with special education eligibility, but the special education needs of affected children have not been systematically studied.
Methods: Retrospective chart reviews from two cohorts of cCMV children receiving care in a large tertiary care children's hospital were included in this study: a historical research cohort (N = 186, 41% symptomatic at birth) and a contemporary clinical cohort of cCMV patients (N = 112, 68% symptomatic at birth).
Antimicrob Resist Infect Control
December 2024
Infectious Diseases Department, Rochester Regional Health, 1425 Portland Avenue, Rochester, NY, 14621, USA.
Background: Congestive heart failure has reached pandemic levels, and left-ventricular assist devices (LVAD) are increasingly used to treat refractory heart failure. Infection is a leading complication of LVADs. Despite numerous reports (most being retrospective), several knowledge gaps pertaining to the epidemiology and burden of an LVAD-associated infection (LVADi) remain.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPlast Surg (Oakv)
December 2024
Division of Plastic Surgery, Vancouver General Hospital, Vancouver, BC, Canada.
The purpose of this study was to determine the necessity and cost-effectiveness of radiologists' interpretation of plain hand radiographs for diagnosing and managing different hand pathologies in the plastic surgery outpatient clinic setting. Through a retrospective cohort study, we identified new patient encounters from January 2021 to December 2022 in an outpatient hand clinic. We included patients with radiology reports that were submitted subsequent to the surgeon's consult note in clinic.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFCardiol Young
December 2024
Department of Pediatrics, MaineHealth, Scarborough, ME, USA.
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