Mind the gap: how vulnerable patients fall through the cracks of cancer quality metrics

Christopher R. Manz, K. Rendle, J. Bekelman
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Abstract

In USA, cancer outcomes have steadily improved but considerable disparities in outcomes persist.1 There is continued evidence that vulnerable patients (ie, those who are socially or economically disadvantaged) are less likely to receive high-quality care and subsequently have poorer outcomes.2 Since the release of the Institute of Medicine’s report Ensuring Quality Cancer Care in 1999, increased attention has been paid to the importance of measuring cancer care quality, understanding its effects on outcomes and identifying effective strategies for ensuring that all patients have access to high-quality cancer care.3 Studies have demonstrated that patient survival varies by hospital type (eg, community vs academic cancer centre), even after risk adjustment for tumour characteristics and comorbidities, and that patients treated at hospitals that perform worse on some cancer quality metrics have inferior survival.4–10 Collectively, these findings suggest that variations in cancer care quality translate into decreased survival for thousands of patients every year, and vulnerable patients are at particular risk of poorer cancer outcomes. The intended goals of quality metrics are to allow hospitals to identify and improve on substandard care, thereby elevating individual and population level cancer care quality, while also enabling patients and payers to choose high-performing hospitals through public reporting. There has been close consideration of how best to measure quality that addresses social drivers of poor cancer outcomes, without punishing hospitals that treat large numbers of vulnerable patients. While quality metrics that focus on the outcomes that matter most to cancer patients—living longer (overall survival) and living better (quality of life)—would be preferred, this is very difficult in practice as these outcomes may indirectly hold hospitals accountable for extrinsic socioeconomic factors beyond their direct control.11 12 The limitations attached to using survival and quality of life outcomes as quality metrics mean that the substantial …
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注意差距:易受伤害的患者如何从癌症质量指标的裂缝中跌落
在美国,癌症治疗结果稳步改善,但治疗结果仍然存在相当大的差异不断有证据表明,易受伤害的病人(即那些在社会或经济上处于不利地位的人)不太可能得到高质量的护理,从而导致较差的结果自1999年美国医学研究所发布《确保癌症治疗质量》报告以来,人们越来越重视衡量癌症治疗质量的重要性,了解其对结果的影响,并确定有效的策略,以确保所有患者都能获得高质量的癌症治疗研究表明,患者生存率因医院类型(例如,社区癌症中心与学术癌症中心)而异,即使在对肿瘤特征和合共病进行风险调整后也是如此,而且在某些癌症质量指标表现较差的医院接受治疗的患者生存率较低。总的来说,这些发现表明,癌症护理质量的变化导致每年数千名患者的生存率下降,弱势患者的癌症预后尤其差。质量指标的预期目标是使医院能够识别和改进不合格的护理,从而提高个人和人口水平的癌症护理质量,同时也使患者和付款人能够通过公开报告选择绩效高的医院。人们一直在密切考虑如何最好地衡量质量,以解决不良癌症结果的社会驱动因素,同时不惩罚治疗大量弱势患者的医院。虽然质量指标关注对癌症患者最重要的结果——活得更久(总体生存)和生活得更好(生活质量)——将是首选,但这在实践中是非常困难的,因为这些结果可能会间接地使医院对其直接控制之外的外部社会经济因素负责。使用生存和生活质量结果作为质量指标的局限性意味着实质性的…
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Quality & Safety in Health Care
Quality & Safety in Health Care 医学-卫生保健
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