(Press-News.org) EUGENE, Ore. — When it comes to health care, patients with the motivation, knowledge, skills and confidence to manage their own health have better health outcomes and incur fewer health care costs.
Those are the findings of a study led by Judith Hibbard, a professor emerita in the Department of Planning, Public Policy and Management at the University of Oregon. Hibbard and co-authors found that patients with the lowest level of "activation"— that is, those most lacking in the skills and confidence to be actively engaged in their health care — had average costs that were from 8 percent to 21 percent higher compared to patients with the highest level of activation. The study was the basis for two papers appearing in the February issue of Health Affairs.
"The study highlights the important role that patients play in determining outcomes," said Hibbard, who recently appeared as a featured expert on health care reform at a White House health care summit at Stanford University. "We found that patients who were more knowledgeable, skilled and confident about managing their day-to-day health and health care — also called patient activation — had health care costs that were substantially lower than patients who lacked this type of confidence and skill."
Hibbard and her team adjusted for patient differences, such as demographic factors and severity of illnesses. Even among patients with the same chronic illness, they found those who were more "activated" had lower overall health care costs than patients who were less so. An earlier study by the same authors had already established that more activated patients also had better health outcomes.
Using a Patient Activation Measure that assesses beliefs, knowledge and confidence in managing health-related tasks, the researchers found that patient scores on a questionnaire that ranks patient activation showed that patients' responses in effect predicted their overall care costs — even when adjusted by the severity of patients' health conditions, age, sex and income.
The researchers recommend that health delivery systems consider assessing these patient activation scores and supporting patients to become more engaged in their health and health care, as a way to both improve patient outcomes and lower costs.
Hibbard's two papers were co-authored by Jessica Greene, a professor and director of research at the George Washington University School of Nursing and a former associate professor at the UO. In the paper "Patients With Lower Activation Associated With Higher Costs; Delivery Systems Should Know Their Patients' 'Scores'" they examined the relationship between patient activation levels and billed care costs by analyzing 33,163 patients of Fairview Health Services, a large health care delivery system in Minnesota.
They found that patients with the lowest activation levels had predicted average costs that were 8 percent higher in the base year and 21 percent higher in the first half of the next year than the costs of patients with the highest activation levels. Patient activation was a significant predictor of cost even after adjusting for a commonly used "risk score" specifically designed to predict future costs.
"Using patient activation levels to more effectively and appropriately support patients appears to be a potentially important way for delivery systems to improve outcomes and lower costs," researchers concluded.
The paper "What The Evidence Shows About Patient Activation: Better Health Outcomes And Care Experiences; Less Data on Costs," serves as a literature review of a broad array of research on patient activation. Hibbard and Greene examined the larger body of research in order to draw conclusions and point out areas in need of further study. They call for a systematic approach in encouraging patients to play a more active role in their health care and determine that policies and interventions aimed at strengthening patients' roles in managing their health care can contribute to improved outcomes.
"The emerging evidence suggests a potentially new quality goal," they conclude. "Increasing patient activation as an intermediate outcome of care that is measurable and linked with improved outcomes."
At a time when many unknowns surround the implementation of the Affordable Care Act, the study provides data that may inform the health care reform movement. The Patient Activation Measure (PAM) system that Hibbard and her colleagues at the UO developed is the industry-leading standard. It the basis for the self-assessment surveys licensed by the Oregon firm Insignia Health, which contracts with The Mayo Health Plan, Johns Hopkins Healthcare systems and other plans across the country. New health care reform measures emphasize self-management as a means of improving patient health and controlling health care costs.
"This study and the assessment system that Dr. Hibbard and her team developed are coming to the fore at a key moment in the evolution of our nation's health care system," said Kimberly Andrews Espy, vice president for research and innovation and dean of the graduate school. "Research conducted at the University of Oregon is giving rise to new tools and entrepreneurial technologies and creating intelligent solutions to tomorrow's problems today."
###
Links:
Activation/costs study: http://content.healthaffairs.org/content/32/2/216.abstract
Department of Planning, Public Policy and Management: http://pppm.uoregon.edu/
Health Affairs homepage: http://www.healthaffairs.org/
White House health care summit: http://med.stanford.edu/ism/2013/january/summit-0128.html
Study highlights important role that patients play in determining outcomes
University of Oregon study shows more 'activated' patients had substantially lower health care costs
2013-02-05
ELSE PRESS RELEASES FROM THIS DATE:
Damaged blood vessels loaded with amyloid worsen cognitive impairment in Alzheimer's disease
2013-02-05
NEW YORK (February 4, 2013) -- A team of researchers at Weill Cornell Medical College has discovered that amyloid peptides are harmful to the blood vessels that supply the brain with blood in Alzheimer's disease -- thus accelerating cognitive decline by limiting oxygen-rich blood and nutrients. In their animal studies, the investigators reveal how amyloid-β accumulates in blood vessels and how such accumulation and damage might be ultimately prevented.
Their study, published in the Feb. 4 online edition of the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences (PNAS), ...
Researchers develop Rx for deafness, impaired balance in mouse model of Usher syndrome
2013-02-05
New Orleans, LA – Jennifer Lentz, PhD, Assistant Professor of Otorhinolaryngology & Biocommunications and a member of the Neuroscience Center of Excellence at LSU Health Sciences Center New Orleans, is the lead author of a paper reporting that hearing and balance can be rescued by a new therapy in a mouse model of Usher syndrome (Usher) that contains the mutation responsible for type 1C Usher. The results provide the first evidence that congenital deafness can be effectively overcome by treatment early in development to correct gene expression. The paper, Rescue of hearing ...
Monogamous birds read partner's food desires
2013-02-05
New research shows that male Eurasian Jays in committed relationships are able to share food with their female partner according to her current desire.
The behaviour suggests the potential for 'state-attribution' in these birds – the ability to recognise and understand the internal life and psychological states of others.
The research was carried out in Professor Nicola Clayton's Comparative Cognition lab at Cambridge University's Department of Psychology, and is published today in the journal PNAS.
Researchers tested mated jays and separated males from females. ...
Birds may need a hand to weather climate change
2013-02-05
A new study led by Durham University and BirdLife International, shows that many bird species are likely to suffer under future climate change, and will require enhanced protection of important sites, better management of the wider countryside, and in some of the most extreme cases may need to be physically moved to climatically suitable areas to help them survive.
The priority, the researchers say, is for stronger protection and effective management of networks of important sites for conservation which currently support priority species and could offer new habitat for ...
Research suggests meerkat predator-scanning behaviour is altruistic
2013-02-05
VIDEO:
In order to spot potential predators, adult meerkats often climb to a higher vantage point or stand on their hind legs. If a predator is detected, they use several different...
Click here for more information.
In order to spot potential predators, adult meerkats often climb to a higher vantage point or stand on their hind legs. If a predator is detected, they use several different alarm calls to warn the rest of the group. New Cambridge research shows that they are ...
Vitamin C supplements linked to kidney stones
2013-02-05
New research from Karolinska Institutet in Sweden shows that men who take vitamin C supplements regularly run a higher risk of developing kidney stones. The study, which is published in the scientific periodical JAMA Internal Medicine, did not however observe an increased risk between kidney stones and multivitamins – which contain lower concentrations of vitamin C.
The research is based on data from a large population-based study of men from Västmanland and Örebro counties, who were monitored for 11 years. A total of 23,355 men were identified who had no history of ...
Injection-free vaccination technique could address global vaccine challenge for HIV, malaria
2013-02-05
Scientists at King's College London have demonstrated the ability to deliver a dried live vaccine to the skin without a traditional needle, and shown for the first time that this technique is powerful enough to enable specialised immune cells in the skin to kick-start the immunising properties of the vaccine.
Funded by the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation and published today in Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences, researchers say although it is an early study this important technical advance offers a potential solution to the challenges of delivering live ...
Chemical reaction keeps stroke-damaged brain from repairing itself
2013-02-05
LA JOLLA, Calif., February 4, 2013 – Nitric oxide, a gaseous molecule produced in the brain, can damage neurons. When the brain produces too much nitric oxide, it contributes to the severity and progression of stroke and neurodegenerative diseases such as Alzheimer's. Researchers at Sanford-Burnham Medical Research Institute recently discovered that nitric oxide not only damages neurons, it also shuts down the brain's repair mechanisms. Their study was published by the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences the week of February 4.
"In this study, we've uncovered ...
Biodiversity exploration in the 3-D era
2013-02-05
Taxonomy – the discipline that defines and names groups of organisms – is a field of science that still employs many of the methods used during the beginnings of the discipline in the 18th century. Despite the increasing use of molecular information to delineate new species, the study of the morphology of specimens remains one of the major tasks of taxonomists. These studies often require first-hand examination of the reference specimens (so-called type material) deposited at museum collections around the globe - a time-consuming and laborious task.
To facilitate this ...
New study finds water tubing-related injuries up 250 percent
2013-02-05
Water tubing, a recreational activity in which participants ride an inner tube which is pulled behind a boat by a tow rope, has grown in popularity in recent years. Unfortunately, the number of injuries related to this activity has also increased.
According to a new study by researchers at the Center for Injury Research and Policy of The Research Institute at Nationwide Children's Hospital, the annual number of water tubing-related injuries increased 250 percent over the 19-year study period, rising from 2,068 injuries in 1991 to 7,216 injuries in 2009. Given that more ...
LAST 30 PRESS RELEASES:
Giant rats could soon fight illegal wildlife trade by sniffing out elephant tusk and rhino horn
Spin current observations from organic semiconductor side
Alcohol consumption among non-human animals may not be as rare as previously thought, say ecologists
Survey: Dangerous gap in knowledge about pancreatic cancer among adults under age 50
Women entering menopause later in life at greater risk for asthma
Sinuses prevented prehistoric croc relatives from deep diving
Spirited away: Key protein aids transport within plant cells
Britain’s brass bands older than we thought and invented by soldiers from the Napoleonic Wars, new study reveals
The Lancet: Health threats of climate change reach record-breaking levels, as experts call for trillions of dollars spent on fossil fuels to be redirected towards protecting people’s health, lives and
‘Weekend warrior’ exercise pattern may equal more frequent sessions for lowering cognitive decline risk
Physical activity of any intensity linked to lower risk of death after dementia diagnosis
Brain changes seen in lifetime cannabis users may not be causal
For the love of suckers: Volunteers contribute to research on key freshwater fishes
Bill and Mary Anne Dingus commit $1M to fund Human Impacts on the Earth Fund at Rice
Most patients can continue GLP-1 anti-obesity drugs before surgery
Computational tool developed to predict immunotherapy outcomes for patients with metastatic breast cancer
Cerebral embolic protection by geographic region
12 new Oriental weevil species discovered using advanced imaging tools
Ultrasound can be used as search and rescue tool for the brain
Department of Defense funds study of gene therapy for muscular degeneration
People’s exposure to toxic chemicals declined in the U.S. following listing under California law
Trauma, homelessness afflict gender affirming care patients at higher rates
New $5 million DoE award supports KU startup’s green hydrogen energy research
A navigation system for microswimmers
Study finds early TAVR can be beneficial for patients with asymptomatic severe aortic stenosis
Implantable microparticles can deliver two cancer therapies at once
Early intervention in patients with asymptomatic severe aortic stenosis and myocardial fibrosis falls short of expected benefits
The surprising reason a classical computer beat a quantum computer at its own game
Researchers Aim To Get Leg Up on Bone Repair with 3D-Printed Femur
Transforming patient care: study finds bedside interdisciplinary rounds boost satisfaction for patients and providers
[Press-News.org] Study highlights important role that patients play in determining outcomesUniversity of Oregon study shows more 'activated' patients had substantially lower health care costs