Assessing The Effectiveness Of Peer Comparisons As A Way To Improve Health Care Quality

Health Aff (Millwood). 2020 May;39(5):852-861. doi: 10.1377/hlthaff.2019.01061.

Abstract

Policy makers are increasingly using performance feedback that compares physicians to their peers as part of payment policy reforms. However, it is not known whether peer comparisons can improve broad outcomes, beyond changing specific individual behaviors such as reducing inappropriate prescribing of antibiotics. We conducted a cluster-randomized controlled trial with Blue Cross Blue Shield of Hawaii to examine the impact of providing peer comparisons feedback on the quality of care to primary care providers in the setting of a shift from fee-for-service to population-based payment. Over 74,000 patients and eighty-eight primary care providers across sixty-three sites were included over a period of nine months in 2016. Patients in the peer comparisons intervention group experienced a 3.1-percentage-point increase in quality scores compared to the control group-whose members received individual feedback only. This result underscores the effectiveness of peer comparisons as a way to improve health care quality, and it supports Medicare's decisions to provide comparative feedback as part of recently implemented primary care and specialty payment reform programs.

Keywords: Diabetes; Health policy; Patient testing; Payment; Primary Care; Quality improvement; Quality measurement; quality of care.

Publication types

  • Randomized Controlled Trial

MeSH terms

  • Aged
  • Blue Cross Blue Shield Insurance Plans
  • Fee-for-Service Plans*
  • Humans
  • Medicare*
  • Primary Health Care
  • Quality of Health Care
  • United States