(Press-News.org) Contact information: Leila Gray
leilag@uw.edu
206-685-0381
The JAMA Network Journals
Increase in consultations for Medicare patients before cataract surgery
Preoperative consultations before cataract surgery became more common for Medicare patients despite no clear guidelines about when to require such a service, hinting at unnecessary use of health care resources, according to a study published by JAMA Internal Medicine, a JAMA Network publication.
Preoperative medical consultation is a common health care service that can be billed separately to Medicare. There is little information about how often preoperative consultation is performed among the large numbers of patients in the United States who undergo elective, low-risk surgical procedures that may not require routine consultation, and how the referral for such consultation varies by patient, facility and geographic region, according to the study background.
Stephan R. Thilen, M.D., M.S., of the University of Washington, Seattle, and colleagues measured consultations performed by family practitioners, general internists, pulmonologists, endocrinologists, nurse practitioners or anesthesiologists as early as 42 days before cataract surgery. Researchers analyzed a 5 percent sample of Medicare part B claims, which included 556,637 patients 66 years or older who had cataract surgery from 1995 to 2006.
The study findings indicate preoperative consultations became more common, increasing from 11.3 percent in 1998 to 18.4 percent in 2006. Older patients (age 75 to 84 years) were more likely to have a consultation than patients between age 66 to 74 years, while patients who were black or lived in a rural area were less likely to receive a consultation. Those patients who had their cataract surgery in an inpatient or outpatient hospital had higher odds of having a consultation than those whose surgery was performed in an office. Patients who had an anesthesiologist involved with their care (either personally administering it or medically directing or supervising certified registered nurse anesthesists) also had higher odds of having a preoperative consultation. Living in the northeast also meant higher odds that a patient would have a consultation compared with patients living in the South or West.
"This large retrospective study suggests that there was substantial use of preoperative medical consultation for cataract surgery and that referrals for consultation had increased during the study period. With the exception of age, referral for preoperative consultation seems driven primarily by nonmedical factors including practice setting, type of anesthesia provider and geographical region," the authors conclude. "These data highlight an area of opportunity for interventions aimed at reducing unwanted practice variability in a process that has the potential to consume vast amounts of health care resources."
(JAMA Intern Med. Published online December 23, 2013. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.13426. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)
Editor's Note: This study was partially supported by funds from the department of Anesthesiology and Pain Medicine, University of Washington, Seattle. Authors also detailed funding support. Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.
Commentary: Are We Choosing Wisely or is This Simply Low-Value Care?
In a related commentary, Lee A. Fleisher, M.D., of the University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia, writes: "A major theme within the Choosing Wisely campaign has been the elimination of routine preoperative evaluation in low-risk patients. … In this issue of JAMA Internal Medicine, Thilen and colleagues demonstrate not only that this is not occurring but that the incidence of preoperative consultations is actually increasing in the Medicare population for patients undergoing cataract surgery."
"The results of this study suggest that a great deal of low-value care is occurring among patients who undergo cataract surgery," Fleisher continues.
"So how do we ensure that provision of low-value or no-value care is reduced or eliminated? Payment reform in which either the entire surgical episode is bundled or the patient is enrolled in an accountable care organization may itself lead to more appropriate use of consultation and testing. It will be important for physicians, armed with this information about current practice patterns, to take the lead in choosing wisely with respect to which patients require a consultation and test before external forces do it for us," Fleisher concludes.
(JAMA Intern Med. Published online December 23, 2013. doi:10.1001/jamainternmed.2013.12298. Available pre-embargo to the media at http://media.jamanetwork.com.)
Editor's Note: Please see the article for additional information, including other authors, author contributions and affiliations, financial disclosures, funding and support, etc.
###
Media Advisory: To contact author Stephan R. Thilen, M.D., M.S., call Leila Gray at 206-685-0381 or email leilag@uw.edu, or call Susan Gregg at 206-616-6730 or email sghanson@uw.edu. To contact commentary author Lee A. Fleisher, M.D., call Lee-Ann Landis at 215-349-5660 or email lee-ann.landis@uphs.penn.edu.
Increase in consultations for Medicare patients before cataract surgery
2013-12-27
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Mongooses synchronize births to escape despotic females
2013-12-27
Mongooses synchronize births to escape despotic females
Some mammals may have evolved to synchronise births as a way of evading the threat of infanticide, according to a study led by the University of Exeter.
To ensure groups remain productive, some ...
Breast cancer patients experience fewer side effects from anticancer drug when receiving acupuncture
2013-12-27
Breast cancer patients experience fewer side effects from anticancer drug when receiving acupuncture
A new analysis has found that both real and sham acupuncture treatments may help alleviate side effects of drugs commonly used to treat breast cancer. Published early online in ...
Pregnant women need not avoid peanuts, evidence shows
2013-12-27
Pregnant women need not avoid peanuts, evidence shows
Peanut and tree nut allergy incidence lower among children whose mothers ate them during pregnancy
BOSTON (Dec. 23, 2013)—Women need not fear that eating peanuts during pregnancy could cause ...
Embargoed study: New quality, payment initiative positively impacts pediatric care
2013-12-27
Embargoed study: New quality, payment initiative positively impacts pediatric care
Contracting model, based on global payment and pay-for-performance, improves quality of care for sickest pediatric patients
BOSTON (Dec. 23, 2013)—Within two years ...
Preop testing for low-risk cataract surgery patients: Choosing wisely or low-value care? Penn Medicine
2013-12-27
Preop testing for low-risk cataract surgery patients: Choosing wisely or low-value care? Penn Medicine
(PHILADELPHIA) – The elimination of extensive routine preoperative tests and consultations represents an area of ...
Getting excited helps with performance anxiety more than trying to calm down, study finds
2013-12-27
Getting excited helps with performance anxiety more than trying to calm down, study finds
Simple statements about excitement could have big effects, research shows
WASHINGTON – People who tell themselves to get excited rather than trying to relax ...
Library that can determine resistance
2013-12-27
Library that can determine resistance
Genetic screening identifies genes driving resistance with a guide RNA library
Researchers have developed a method to create a comprehensive library of mutations across all genes in the mouse genome. This library ...
Hypoxic preconditioning stimulates angiogenesis in ischemic penumbra after ACI
2013-12-27
Hypoxic preconditioning stimulates angiogenesis in ischemic penumbra after ACI
Hypoxic preconditioning has been shown to have protective effects against acute cerebral infarction. To investigate the protective mechanisms of hypoxic preconditioning in relation ...
Transient receptor potential channel A1 may contribute to hyperalgesia
2013-12-27
Transient receptor potential channel A1 may contribute to hyperalgesia
Transient receptor potential channel A1 is one of the important transducers of noxious stimuli in the primary afferents, which may contribute to generation of neurogenic inflammation and hyperalgesia. ...
An expert consensus on acute thoracolumbar spine and spinal cord injury in China
2013-12-27
An expert consensus on acute thoracolumbar spine and spinal cord injury in China
The early management of acute thoracolumbar spine and spinal cord injury is one of the most difficult tasks when treating trauma cases. To standardize the evaluation and treatment of ...