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Comparing methods for assessing the reliability of health care quality measures.

Kenneth J NieserAlex H S Harris
Published in: Statistics in medicine (2024)
Quality measurement plays an increasing role in U.S. health care. Measures inform quality improvement efforts, public reporting of variations in quality of care across providers and hospitals, and high-stakes financial decisions. To be meaningful in these contexts, measures should be reliable and not heavily impacted by chance variations in sampling or measurement. Several different methods are used in practice by measure developers and endorsers to evaluate reliability; however, there is uncertainty and debate over differences between these methods and their interpretations. We review methods currently used in practice, pointing out differences that can lead to disparate reliability estimates. We compare estimates from 14 different methods in the case of two sets of mental health quality measures within a large health system. We find that estimates can differ substantially and that these discrepancies widen when sample size is reduced.
Keyphrases
  • quality improvement
  • healthcare
  • mental health
  • patient safety
  • primary care
  • young adults
  • mental illness
  • social media
  • electronic health record
  • health information
  • health insurance