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Medical Care:
October 2007 - Volume 45 - Issue 10 - pp 989-996
doi: 10.1097/MLR.0b013e318074ce63
Original Article

Patient Samples for Measuring Primary Care Physician Performance: Who Should Be Included?

Rodriguez, Hector P. PhD, MPH; von Glahn, Ted MS; Chang, Hong PhD; Rogers, William H. PhD; Safran, Dana Gelb ScD

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Abstract

Background: In measuring patients' experiences with individual primary care physicians (PCPs), the reliability and validity of data based on samples of established patients of a physician's panel have been shown. However, as large-scale initiatives seek the least costly approach to obtaining these data, little is known about the implications of expanding samples to include any patient who has seen the physician in the relevant time period.

Methods: A brief validated patient questionnaire was administered to a random sample of patients visiting 67 PCPs in California between January and October 2005. We evaluated the concordance between administrative and patient-reported information on whether the physician was the patient's PCP. Response rates, data quality, and experiences reported by confirmed established patients were compared with those of unestablished patients.

Results: Administrative data designating patients as established to a PCP were highly concordant with patient self-report (96.5%). For unestablished patients, concordance was considerably lower (40.0%). Response rates among established patients were higher than those of patients believed to be unestablished (35.5% vs. 22.2%). Compared with established patients of a PCP's practice, unestablished patients reported significantly less favorable experiences with the doctor (interaction quality, P < 0.001; health promotion, P < 0.001; access, P < 0.001; integration, P < 0.05). The ranking of individual physicians differed for established and unestablished patient samples.

Conclusions: Initiatives measuring patients' experiences with individual primary care physicians will achieve different results (response rates, physician scores) if samples include any patient who has seen the physician versus those whom administrative data indicate as established members of the physician's panel.

© 2007 Lippincott Williams & Wilkins, Inc.

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