PLoS ONE (Jan 2022)

Understanding clinician connections to inform efforts to promote high-quality inflammatory bowel disease care.

  • Shirley Cohen-Mekelburg,
  • Tony Van,
  • Xianshi Yu,
  • Deena Kelly Costa,
  • Milisa Manojlovich,
  • Sameer Saini,
  • Heather Gilmartin,
  • Andrew J Admon,
  • Ken Resnicow,
  • Peter D R Higgins,
  • Geoffrey Siwo,
  • Ji Zhu,
  • Akbar K Waljee

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pone.0279441
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 17, no. 12
p. e0279441

Abstract

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BackgroundHighly connected individuals disseminate information effectively within their social network. To apply this concept to inflammatory bowel disease (IBD) care and lay the foundation for network interventions to disseminate high-quality treatment, we assessed the need for improving the IBD practices of highly connected clinicians. We aimed to examine whether highly connected clinicians who treat IBD patients were more likely to provide high-quality treatment than less connected clinicians.MethodsWe used network analysis to examine connections among clinicians who shared patients with IBD in the Veterans Health Administration between 2015-2018. We created a network comprised of clinicians connected by shared patients. We quantified clinician connections using degree centrality (number of clinicians with whom a clinician shares patients), closeness centrality (reach via shared contacts to other clinicians), and betweenness centrality (degree to which a clinician connects clinicians not otherwise connected). Using weighted linear regression, we examined associations between each measure of connection and two IBD quality indicators: low prolonged steroids use, and high steroid-sparing therapy use.ResultsWe identified 62,971 patients with IBD and linked them to 1,655 gastroenterologists and 7,852 primary care providers. Clinicians with more connections (degree) were more likely to exhibit high-quality treatment (less prolonged steroids beta -0.0268, 95%CI -0.0427, -0.0110, more steroid-sparing therapy beta 0.0967, 95%CI 0.0128, 0.1805). Clinicians who connect otherwise unconnected clinicians (betweenness) displayed more prolonged steroids use (beta 0.0003, 95%CI 0.0001, 0.0006). The presence of variation is more relevant than its magnitude.ConclusionsClinicians with a high number of connections provided more high-quality IBD treatments than less connected clinicians, and may be well-positioned for interventions to disseminate high-quality IBD care. However, clinicians who connect clinicians who are otherwise unconnected are more likely to display low-quality IBD treatment. Efforts to improve their quality are needed prior to leveraging their position to disseminate high-quality care.