Community Assessment of COPD Health Care (COACH) study: a clinical audit on primary care performance variability in COPD care
Abstract Background A thorough evaluation of the adequacy of clinical practice in a designated health care setting and temporal context is key for clinical care improvement. This study aimed to perform a clinical audit of primary care to evaluate clinical care delivered to patients with COPD in rout...
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doaj-7fcb1f6d64bf47c797a12617657195b02020-11-25T00:43:26ZengBMCBMC Medical Research Methodology1471-22882018-07-0118111310.1186/s12874-018-0528-4Community Assessment of COPD Health Care (COACH) study: a clinical audit on primary care performance variability in COPD careMaría Abad-Arranz0Ana Moran-Rodríguez1Enrique Mascarós Balaguer2Carmen Quintana Velasco3Laura Abad Polo4Sara Núñez Palomo5Jaime Gonzálvez Rey6Ana María Fernández Vargas7Antonio Hidalgo Requena8Jose Manuel Helguera Quevedo9Marina García Pardo10Jose Luis Lopez-Campos11on behalf of the COACH study investigatorsUnidad Médico-Quirúrgica de Enfermedades Respiratorias, Instituto de Biomedicina de Sevilla (IBiS), Hospital Universitario Virgen del Rocío/Universidad de SevillaUGC-DCCU Bahía de Cádiz-La JandaCentro de Salud Fuente de San LuisCentro de Salud Perpetuo SocorroCentro de Salud Illueca, Sector CalatayudCentro de Salud TorrelagunaCentro de Salud MatamáCentro de Salud La VictoriaCentro de Salud de LucenaCentro de Salud Bajo AsónCentro de Salud de IncaUnidad Médico-Quirúrgica de Enfermedades Respiratorias, Instituto de Biomedicina de Sevilla (IBiS), Hospital Universitario Virgen del Rocío/Universidad de SevillaAbstract Background A thorough evaluation of the adequacy of clinical practice in a designated health care setting and temporal context is key for clinical care improvement. This study aimed to perform a clinical audit of primary care to evaluate clinical care delivered to patients with COPD in routine clinical practice. Methods The Community Assessment of COPD Health Care (COACH) study was an observational, multicenter, nationwide, non-interventional, retrospective, clinical audit of randomly selected primary care centers in Spain. Two different databases were built: the resources and organization database and the clinical database. From January 1, 2015 to December 31, 2016 consecutive clinical cases of COPD in each participating primary care center (PCC) were audited. For descriptive purposes, we collected data regarding the age at diagnosis of COPD and the age at audit, gender, the setting of the PCC (rural/urban), and comorbidities for each patient. Two guidelines widely and uniformly used in Spain were carefully reviewed to establish a benchmark of adequacy for the audited cases. Clinical performance was analyzed at the patient, center, and regional levels. The degree of adequacy was categorized as excellent (> 80%), good (60–80%), adequate (40–59%), inadequate (20–39%), and highly inadequate (< 20%). Results During the study 4307 cases from 63 primary care centers in 6 regions of the country were audited. Most evaluated parameters were judged to fall in the inadequate performance category. A correct diagnosis based on previous exposure plus spirometric obstruction was made in an average of 17.6% of cases, ranging from 9.8 to 23.3% depending on the region. During the audited visit, only 67 (1.6%) patients had current post-bronchodilator obstructive spirometry; 184 (4.3%) patients had current post-bronchodilator obstructive spirometry during either the audited or initial diagnostic visit. Evaluation of dyspnea was performed in 11.1% of cases. Regarding treatment, 33.6% received no maintenance inhaled therapies (ranging from 31.3% in GOLD A to 7.0% in GOLD D). The two most frequently registered items were exacerbations in the previous year (81.4%) and influenza vaccination (87.7%). Conclusions The results of this audit revealed a large variability in clinical performance across centers, which was not fully attributable to the severity of the disease.http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-018-0528-4COPDClinical auditPrimary careQuality of careVariability |
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language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
María Abad-Arranz Ana Moran-Rodríguez Enrique Mascarós Balaguer Carmen Quintana Velasco Laura Abad Polo Sara Núñez Palomo Jaime Gonzálvez Rey Ana María Fernández Vargas Antonio Hidalgo Requena Jose Manuel Helguera Quevedo Marina García Pardo Jose Luis Lopez-Campos on behalf of the COACH study investigators |
spellingShingle |
María Abad-Arranz Ana Moran-Rodríguez Enrique Mascarós Balaguer Carmen Quintana Velasco Laura Abad Polo Sara Núñez Palomo Jaime Gonzálvez Rey Ana María Fernández Vargas Antonio Hidalgo Requena Jose Manuel Helguera Quevedo Marina García Pardo Jose Luis Lopez-Campos on behalf of the COACH study investigators Community Assessment of COPD Health Care (COACH) study: a clinical audit on primary care performance variability in COPD care BMC Medical Research Methodology COPD Clinical audit Primary care Quality of care Variability |
author_facet |
María Abad-Arranz Ana Moran-Rodríguez Enrique Mascarós Balaguer Carmen Quintana Velasco Laura Abad Polo Sara Núñez Palomo Jaime Gonzálvez Rey Ana María Fernández Vargas Antonio Hidalgo Requena Jose Manuel Helguera Quevedo Marina García Pardo Jose Luis Lopez-Campos on behalf of the COACH study investigators |
author_sort |
María Abad-Arranz |
title |
Community Assessment of COPD Health Care (COACH) study: a clinical audit on primary care performance variability in COPD care |
title_short |
Community Assessment of COPD Health Care (COACH) study: a clinical audit on primary care performance variability in COPD care |
title_full |
Community Assessment of COPD Health Care (COACH) study: a clinical audit on primary care performance variability in COPD care |
title_fullStr |
Community Assessment of COPD Health Care (COACH) study: a clinical audit on primary care performance variability in COPD care |
title_full_unstemmed |
Community Assessment of COPD Health Care (COACH) study: a clinical audit on primary care performance variability in COPD care |
title_sort |
community assessment of copd health care (coach) study: a clinical audit on primary care performance variability in copd care |
publisher |
BMC |
series |
BMC Medical Research Methodology |
issn |
1471-2288 |
publishDate |
2018-07-01 |
description |
Abstract Background A thorough evaluation of the adequacy of clinical practice in a designated health care setting and temporal context is key for clinical care improvement. This study aimed to perform a clinical audit of primary care to evaluate clinical care delivered to patients with COPD in routine clinical practice. Methods The Community Assessment of COPD Health Care (COACH) study was an observational, multicenter, nationwide, non-interventional, retrospective, clinical audit of randomly selected primary care centers in Spain. Two different databases were built: the resources and organization database and the clinical database. From January 1, 2015 to December 31, 2016 consecutive clinical cases of COPD in each participating primary care center (PCC) were audited. For descriptive purposes, we collected data regarding the age at diagnosis of COPD and the age at audit, gender, the setting of the PCC (rural/urban), and comorbidities for each patient. Two guidelines widely and uniformly used in Spain were carefully reviewed to establish a benchmark of adequacy for the audited cases. Clinical performance was analyzed at the patient, center, and regional levels. The degree of adequacy was categorized as excellent (> 80%), good (60–80%), adequate (40–59%), inadequate (20–39%), and highly inadequate (< 20%). Results During the study 4307 cases from 63 primary care centers in 6 regions of the country were audited. Most evaluated parameters were judged to fall in the inadequate performance category. A correct diagnosis based on previous exposure plus spirometric obstruction was made in an average of 17.6% of cases, ranging from 9.8 to 23.3% depending on the region. During the audited visit, only 67 (1.6%) patients had current post-bronchodilator obstructive spirometry; 184 (4.3%) patients had current post-bronchodilator obstructive spirometry during either the audited or initial diagnostic visit. Evaluation of dyspnea was performed in 11.1% of cases. Regarding treatment, 33.6% received no maintenance inhaled therapies (ranging from 31.3% in GOLD A to 7.0% in GOLD D). The two most frequently registered items were exacerbations in the previous year (81.4%) and influenza vaccination (87.7%). Conclusions The results of this audit revealed a large variability in clinical performance across centers, which was not fully attributable to the severity of the disease. |
topic |
COPD Clinical audit Primary care Quality of care Variability |
url |
http://link.springer.com/article/10.1186/s12874-018-0528-4 |
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