Inquiry: The Journal of Health Care Organization, Provision, and Financing (Mar 2016)

Using Clinical Vignettes to Assess Quality of Care for Acute Respiratory Infections

  • Courtney A. Gidengil MD, MPH,
  • Jeffrey A. Linder MD, MPH,
  • Scott Beach PhD,
  • Claude M. Setodji PhD,
  • Gerald Hunter MS,
  • Ateev Mehrotra MD, MPH

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1177/0046958016636531
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 53

Abstract

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Overprescribing of antibiotics for acute respiratory infections (ARIs) is common. Our objective was to develop and validate a vignette-based method to estimate clinician ARI antibiotic prescribing. We surveyed physicians (n = 78) and retail clinic clinicians (n = 109) between January and September 2013. We surveyed clinicians using a set of ARI vignettes and linked the responses to electronic health record data for all ARI visits managed by these clinicians during 2012. We then created a new measure of antibiotic prescribing, the comprehensive ARI management rate. This was defined as not prescribing antibiotics for antibiotic-inappropriate diagnoses and prescribing guideline-concordant antibiotics for antibiotic-appropriate diagnoses (and also included appropriate use of streptococcal testing for the pharyngitis vignettes). We compared the vignette-based and chart-based comprehensive ARI management at the clinician level. We then identified the combination of vignettes that best predicted comprehensive ARI management rates, using a partitioning algorithm. Responses to 3 vignettes partitioned clinicians into 4 groups with chart-based comprehensive ARI management rates of 61% (n = 121), 50% (n = 47), 31% (n = 12), and 22% (n = 7). Responses to 3 clinical vignettes can identify clinicians with relatively poor quality ARI antibiotic prescribing. Vignettes may be a mechanism to target clinicians for quality improvement efforts.