Care management tools include:
Primary care physicians were more likely than specialists to report that their practice of medicine had been affected by practice guidelines and by practice profiling, and that the overall effect of each of these tools on their efficiency and quality was positive. Among primary care physicians, pediatricians were most likely to report positive effects (finding for practice profiling not statistically significant). Surgeons affected by patient satisfaction surveys were more likely to view them positively than physicians in other medical subspecialties, while those affected by guidelines were less likely to give positive assessments.
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Practice Guidelines
|
Patient Satisfaction Surveys
|
Practice Profiling
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Specialty |
|
|
|
|
|
|
Primary Care |
|
73%
|
63%
|
78%
|
40%
|
54%
|
Pediatrics3 |
|
78*
|
65
|
81*
|
40
|
59
|
Internal medicine3 |
|
71
|
62
|
77
|
41
|
52
|
General/Family practice |
|
71
|
63
|
77
|
40
|
54
|
Specialists4 |
|
60*
|
61
|
77
|
30*
|
48*
|
Medical |
|
66
|
60
|
75
|
30
|
51
|
Surgical5 |
|
52*
|
62
|
80*
|
31
|
45
|
1Percent of physicians reporting care management tool has had a moderate, large or very large effect on their practice of medicine.
2Percent of physicians affected by care management tool reporting the overall effect on the quality and efficiency of their medical practice has been positive.
3Comparison of estimate in asterisked cell(s) * with estimate for physicians in general / family practice is statistically significant at p<.05.
4Comparison of estimate for specialists in asterisked cell(s) * with estimate for primary care physicians is statistically significant at p<.05.
5Comparison of estimate for surgeons in asterisked cell(s) * with estimate for medical subspecialties is statistically significant at p<.05.
Source: HSC Community Tracking Study Physician Survey