I love pediatric benchmarks. Knowing the real underlying behavior in my clients' offices helps me speak to them and understand them better. There's a particular joy and insight to finding data that challenges the status quo understanding that physicians have of their own offices.
Here's one, and this is very, very interesting data. Ask a pediatrician - ask yourself - how many of the kids you treat are up-to-date with their physicals. When I ask, I usually hear things like, "Well, just about all of them!" Or, "90% or higher!" Practices feel like they do a good job getting all those visits in when we know that's really not true.
Not only are getting those physicals done good medicine, they're good for your bottom line. Most practice I work with have missed thousands of well visits this year. Yes, thousands. At ~$100-200 a pop, you can do the math.
Don't believe me? Don't think you're one of those offices?
Igor and I already broke down active physical rates for our internal benchmarking dashboard our clients enjoy, but we wanted to do something for everyone. So, here it is.
What "we" did (I say "we" because Igor did most of the work, I just do the heavy thinking, you know...) - we broke kids down into 5 different age groups and then took a look at how many of them were up-to-date with their physicals. For all the kids over the age of three, it's easy to calculate: all of the active kids who have had a physical in the last year divided by the total active kids in your practice.
For example, if you count up all the active kids between the ages of 3 and 6 years old who had had a physical in the last 365d, you might find 1500. If you then count up all the active kids between 3 and 6 years old, regardless of their physical statuses, you might find that there are 2000. 1500/2000 = 75%. Get it? Non PCCers can do this easily, in theory. For kids in the 15m to 3yr category, we looked for a well visit within the last 6 months. Younger than that, it gets tricky.
Let's take a look at the first part of the results (click on the image for a zoomed in view):
I hope this is easy enough to follow - the blue band represents the mean percentage of active patients in each age group who are up-to-date with their physicals. The surrounding green bands represent the 25/75th percentiles and the red bands represent the 10/90th percentiles.
So, which percentile are you in?
Are 1/2 of your kids from 7-11 overdue for their physicals? What scares me the most is the big dropoff for the kids in the 15m-3y range. More next week.
Well Visit Coverage Data
Chip, The post made me curious about something. I noticed youmentioned, active patient. At first I said, it doesn’t really matter. The purpose is totry to bring in as many overdue patients as you can. And the intent of theexercise is to give us a standard by which we can measure a practice’sperformance as it pertains to well child’s. But then I thought, if it doesn’t matter, then why make thedistinction? Why not just say, count ALL your patients. So, I have to ask, how do you define “active patient?” If a patient has not had a visit (well child orsick visit) in the last 3 years, is she still an active patient? How about if apatient has not been back in 5 years? Active? As always, great info. Brandon
Well Visit Coverage Data
Good question, and one I should have forseen and answered in the original message.
Active patients, for this purposes, are patients who have a) been seen by the practice at least once in the last three years and b) are not marked with an "inactive" by our clients.
It is important to note inactive patients for both the purpose of this measurement as well as other clinical purposes. If your practice splits and you lose a small group of patients or you drop an insurance and 20% of them go somewhere else - these are things you have to take into account.
Hope this helps!
Chip Hart - Pediatric Solutions
chip @ pcc.com
800-722-7708
http://pedsource.com/blog