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Case-Mix Adjustment and Enabled Reporting of the Health Care Experiences of Adults With Disabilities
Authors:Susan E. Palsbo  Guoqing Diao  Gregory A. Palsbo  William F. Rosenberger  Margaret F. Mastal
Affiliation:a Center for the Study of Chronic Illness and Disability, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA
b Department of Statistics, George Mason University, Fairfax, VA
c Undergraduate, Department of Psychology, University of Oregon, Eugene, OR
d Delmarva Foundation for Medical Care, Easton, MD
Abstract:Palsbo SE, Diao G, Palsbo GA, Tang L, Rosenberger WF, Mastal MF. Case-mix adjustment and enabled reporting of the health care experiences of adults with disabilities.

Objectives

To develop activity limitation clusters for case-mix adjustment of health care ratings and as a population profiler, and to develop a cognitively accessible report of statistically reliable quality and access measures comparing the health care experiences of adults with and without disabilities, within and across health delivery organizations.

Design

Observational study.

Setting

Three California Medicaid health care organizations.

Participants

Adults (N = 1086) of working age enrolled for at least 1 year in Medicaid because of disability.

Interventions

Not applicable.

Main Outcome Measures

Principal components analysis created 4 clusters of activity limitations that we used to characterize case mix. We indentified and calculated 28 quality measures using responses from a proposed enabled version of the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS) survey. We calculated scores for overall care as the weighted mean of the case-mix adjusted ratings.

Results

Disability caused a greater bias on health plan ratings and specialist ratings than did demographic factors. Proxy respondents rated care the same as self-respondents. Telephone and mail administration were equivalent for service reports, but telephone respondents tended to offer more positive global ratings. Plan-level reliability estimates for new composites on shared decision making and advice on healthy living are .79 and .87, respectively. Plan-level reliability estimates for a new composite measure on family planning did not discriminate between health plans because respondents rated all health plans poorly. Approximately 125 respondents per site are necessary to detect group differences.

Conclusions

Self-reported activity limitations incorporating standard questions from the American Community Survey can be used to create a disability case-mix index and to construct profiles of a population's activity limitations. The enabled comparative report, which we call the Assessment of Health Plans and Providers by People with Activity Limitations, is more cognitively accessible than typical CAHPS report templates for state Medicaid plans. The CAHPS Medicaid reporting tools may provide misleading ratings of health plan and physician quality by people with disabilities because the mean ratings do not account for systematic biases associated with disability. More testing on larger populations would help to quantify the strength of various reporting biases.
Keywords:Patient satisfaction   Outcome and process assessment   Disability   Medicaid   Rehabilitation
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