Objectives
Better quality-of-care measured by 140 care-process quality indicators (QIs) from the Assessing Care of Vulnerable Elders Study (ACOVE-1) predicts better survival. A subsequent study (ACOVE-2) reduced the measures to 69 ambulatory-care QIs. We identified further need to prioritize and reduce the QIs to facilitate future quality improvement efforts. We aimed to identify subsets of ambulatory QIs associated with better survival and physical function outcomes.
Design
Observational cohort study
Setting and participants
1015 older ambulatory-care patients in ACOVE-1 and ACOVE-2
Measurements
To develop the QI subsets, we first convened an expert panel to rate each of 69 ambulatory-care QIs for strength of process-benefit link, defined as: (1) direct trial evidence on older patients, or(2) high expectation of benefit if a trial were conducted in older patients. This resulted in three reduced QI sets, reflecting their intended benefit: 17 QIs for survival (ACOVE-Quality-for-Survival, AQS-17), 5 QIs to preserve function (AQF-5), and 16 QIs to improve quality-of-life related to physical health and symptoms(AQQ-16). We first tested whether AQS-17 would predict3-year survival in 1015 pooled ACOVE-1 and ACOVE-2 patients. Second, we tested whether AQF-5(n=74) and AQQ-16(n=359) would predict change in the physical component score (PCS) ofShort-Form-12 at one-year in the ACOVE-2cohort. Controls: age, function-based vulnerability, co-morbidity.
Results
Each20 percentage-point increment inAQS-17 was associated with survival (HR .83, p=.014)up to 500 days, but not thereafter. AQF-5, but not AQQ-16, predicted 1-year improvement in PCS (1.13-points per 20 percentage-point increment in AQF-5, p=.021).
Conclusion
Subsets of care processes can be linked with outcomes important to older patients.AQS-17 and AQF-5 are potential tools for improving ambulatory care for older adults.