Patient and provider-level factors associated with changes in utilization of treatments in response to evidence on ineffectiveness or harm

被引:0
|
作者
Laura Barrie Smith
Nihar R. Desai
Bryan Dowd
Alexander Everhart
Jeph Herrin
Lucas Higuera
Molly Moore Jeffery
Anupam B. Jena
Joseph S. Ross
Nilay D. Shah
Pinar Karaca-Mandic
机构
[1] University of Minnesota School of Public Health,Division of Health Policy and Management
[2] Yale School of Medicine,Cardiovascular Medicine
[3] Yale School of Medicine,Center for Outcomes Research and Evaluation
[4] Medtronic,Health Economics and Outcomes Research
[5] Mayo Clinic, Cardiac Rhythm and Heart Failure
[6] Mayo Clinic,Department of Health Sciences Research
[7] Harvard Medical School,Emergency Medicine Research
[8] Massachusetts General Hospital,Department of Health Care Policy
[9] National Bureau of Economic Research,Department of Medicine
[10] Yale School of Medicine,General Internal Medicine
[11] Yale School of Public Health,Health Policy and Management
[12] University of Minnesota,Carlson School of Management
来源
International Journal of Health Economics and Management | 2020年 / 20卷
关键词
De-adoption; Physician behavior; Disparities; I10; I11;
D O I
暂无
中图分类号
学科分类号
摘要
High-quality health care not only includes timely access to effective new therapies but timely abandonment of therapies when they are found to be ineffective or unsafe. Little is known about changes in use of medications after they are shown to be ineffective or unsafe. In this study, we examine changes in use of two medications: fenofibrate, which was found to be ineffective when used with statins among patients with Type 2 diabetes (ACCORD lipid trial); and dronedarone, which was found to be unsafe in patients with permanent atrial fibrillation (PALLAS trial). We examine the patient and provider characteristics associated with a decline in use of these medications. Using Medicare fee-for-service claims from 2008 to 2013, we identified two cohorts: patients with Type 2 diabetes using statins (7 million patient-quarters), and patients with permanent atrial fibrillation (83 thousand patient-quarters). We used interrupted time-series regression models to identify the patient- and provider-level characteristics associated with changes in medication use after new evidence emerged for each case. After new evidence of ineffectiveness emerged, fenofibrate use declined by 0.01 percentage points per quarter (95% CI − 0.02 to − 0.01) from a baseline of 6.9 percent of all diabetes patients receiving fenofibrate; dronedarone use declined by 0.13 percentage points per quarter (95% CI − 0.15 to − 0.10) from a baseline of 3.8 percent of permanent atrial fibrillation patients receiving dronedarone. For dronedarone, use declined more quickly among patients dually-enrolled in Medicare and Medicaid compared to Medicare-only patients (P < 0.001), among patients seen by male providers compared to female providers (P = 0.01), and among patients seen by cardiologists compared to primary care providers (P < 0.001).
引用
收藏
页码:299 / 317
页数:18
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