» Articles » PMID: 25848577

Medical Home Characteristics and Asthma Control: a Prospective, Observational Cohort Study Protocol

Overview
Journal EGEMS (Wash DC)
Publisher Ubiquity Press
Date 2015 Apr 8
PMID 25848577
Citations 1
Authors
Affiliations
Soon will be listed here.
Abstract

Background: This paper describes the methods for an observational comparative effectiveness research study designed to test the association between practice-level medical home characteristics and asthma control in children and adults receiving care in safety-net primary care practices.

Methods: This is a prospective, longitudinal cohort study, utilizing survey methodologies and secondary analysis of existing structured clinical, administrative, and claims data. The Scalable Architecture for Federated Translational Inquiries Network (SAFTINet) is a safety net-oriented, primary care practice-based research network, with federated databases containing electronic health record (EHR) and Medicaid claims data. Data from approximately 20,000 patients from 50 practices in four healthcare organizations will be included. Practice-level medical home characteristics will be correlated with patient-level asthma outcomes, controlling for potential confounding variables, using a clustered design. Linear and non-linear mixed models will be used for analysis. Study inception was July 1, 2012. A causal graph theory approach was used to guide covariate selection to control for bias and confounding.

Discussion: Strengths of this design include a priori specification of hypotheses and methods, a large sample of patients with asthma cared for in safety-net practices, the study of real-world variations in the implementation of the medical home concept, and the innovative use of a combination of claims data, patient-reported data, clinical data from EHRs, and practice-level surveys. We address limitations in causal inference using theory, design and analysis.

Citing Articles

Dynamic-ETL: a hybrid approach for health data extraction, transformation and loading.

Ong T, Kahn M, Kwan B, Yamashita T, Brandt E, Hosokawa P BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2017; 17(1):134.

PMID: 28903729 PMC: 5598056. DOI: 10.1186/s12911-017-0532-3.

References
1.
Stevens G, Seid M, Pickering T, Tsai K . National disparities in the quality of a medical home for children. Matern Child Health J. 2009; 14(4):580-9. DOI: 10.1007/s10995-009-0454-5. View

2.
Lutfiyya M, Scott N, Hurliman B, McCullough J, Zeitz H, Lipsky M . Determining an association between having a medical home and uncontrolled asthma in US school-aged children: a population-based study using data from the National Survey of Children's Health. Postgrad Med. 2010; 122(2):94-101. DOI: 10.3810/pgm.2010.03.2126. View

3.
Rittenhouse D, Casalino L, Shortell S, McClellan S, Gillies R, Alexander J . Small and medium-size physician practices use few patient-centered medical home processes. Health Aff (Millwood). 2011; 30(8):1575-84. DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2010.1210. View

4.
Moorman J, Mannino D . Increasing U.S. asthma mortality rates: who is really dying?. J Asthma. 2001; 38(1):65-71. DOI: 10.1081/jas-100000023. View

5.
Diedhiou A, Probst J, Hardin J, Martin A, Xirasagar S . Relationship between presence of a reported medical home and emergency department use among children with asthma. Med Care Res Rev. 2010; 67(4):450-75. DOI: 10.1177/1077558710367735. View