The overuse of medical services is an increasingly recognized driver of poor quality care and high cost. A practical framework is needed to guide clinical decisions and facilitate concrete actions that can reduce overuse and improve care. We used an iterative, expert-informed evidence-based process to develop a framework for conceptualizing interventions to reduce medical overuse.
Given the complexity of defining and identifying overused care in nuanced clinical situations and the need to define care appropriateness in the context of an individual patient, this framework conceptualizes the patient-clinician interaction as the nexus of decisions regarding inappropriate care. Other drivers of utilization influence this interaction and include health care system factors, the practice environment, the culture of professional medicine, the culture of health care consumption, and individual patient and clinician factors. The variable strength of evidence in support of these domains highlights important areas for further investigation.