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Research ArticleOriginal Research

Medical Practice Variation Among Primary Care Physicians: 1 Decade, 14 Health Services, and 3,238,498 Patient-Years

Sagi Shashar, Moriah Ellen, Shlomi Codish, Ehud Davidson and Victor Novack
The Annals of Family Medicine January 2021, 19 (1) 30-37; DOI: https://doi.org/10.1370/afm.2627
Sagi Shashar
1Clinical Research Center, Soroka University Medical Center and Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Be'er-Sheva, Israel
MSc
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Moriah Ellen
2Department of Health Systems Management, Guilford Glazer Faculty of Business and Management and Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben Gurion University of the Negev, Be'er-Sheva, Israel
5Institute of Health Policy Management and Evaluation, Dalla Lana School of Public Health, University of Toronto, Toronto, Ontario, Canada
6McMaster Health Forum, McMaster University, Hamilton, Ontario, Canada
PhD
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Shlomi Codish
3Soroka University Medical Center and Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Be'er-Sheva, Israel
MD, MPH
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Ehud Davidson
4General Management, Clalit Health Services, Tel-Aviv, Israel
MD
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Victor Novack
1Clinical Research Center, Soroka University Medical Center and Faculty of Health Sciences, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, Be'er-Sheva, Israel
MD, PhD
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  • For correspondence: victorno@clalit.org.il

The Article in Brief

Medical Practice Variation Among Primary Care Physicians: 1 Decade, 14 Health Services, 3,238,498 Patient-Years

Victor Novack , and colleagues

Background Harmful medical practices, like inappropriate prescribing of opioids and racial and income-based discrimination in clinical settings, can vary across medical practices and individuals. Patients may find that even common primary care health services, like getting a chest x-rays or a referral to a heart or lung specialist, can differ widely depending on your doctor or clinic location. These variations in medical practice can have serious consequences for the quality, equity and cost of one�s health care; however, it�s unclear whether these disparities can be attributed to individual differences, from one doctor to another or to changes in your doctor�s individual practice over time, perhaps in response to shifts in clinical guidelines or advancements in diagnostic technologists. Is it person-to-person variation or variation over time?

What This Study Found A group of Israeli researchers sought to answer this question in a retrospective cohort study using a decade of data from the largest health care provider in southern Israel. This study shows variations between physicians� practice patterns to be significantly more pronounced than variations within an individual physician�s practice patterns over a decade. Researchers assessed the medical practice patterns of 251 primary care physicians, including their rates of imaging tests, cardiac tests, laboratory tests, and specialist visits. After adjusting for different patient and clinic characteristics, practice pattern variations remain high, while individual physicians' patterns over time appear stable.

Implications

  • The authors propose that medical practitioners' personal behavioral characteristics might help explain variations across practice patterns.

  View article

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