Background
Quality improvement is not possible without quantitative quality assessment [
1] Despite a variety of initiatives that aim to increase quality of primary care in Switzerland [
2‐
5]. including certification measures, in-house medical guideline development, or quality circles, measures to raise transparency on the level of quality of care of ambulatory services in Switzerland were lacking. Therefore, in 2018, a first set of nationwide applicable quality indicators (QI) has been presented [
6]. These QI are calculated based on information from health insurance claims data, the single data source that is nationwide pre-existing and available in a standardised and equivalent format. The intention of the project was to propose a set of rigorously developed and publicly available QI based on evidence from national and international guidelines and pre-existing QI including assessment of local public health relevance and patients´ and consumers´ perspectives. The central idea was to continuously evaluate, refine and expand the proposed QI.
The aim of the present paper is to describe the update process and to present additional QI consented by the expert group. Results of this informal update and expansion process are of immediate relevance for the local health system: 7 indicators of the initial indicator set are currently in different implementation phases in the context of contracts between health insurances and health service providers and are therefore directly impacting health services provision and healthcare provider reimbursement schemes in Swiss routine primary care [
7]. In general, on the national regulatory level relating to basic mandatory health insurance in Switzerland, most recently a new legislation entered into force which requires healthcare providers and insurers to conclude national agreements on quality development so that quality indicators for the ambulatory sector are or increasing importance for various stakeholders in the Swiss healthcare system [
6].
Results
We extracted guideline recommendations and QI from 3 National Disease Management Guidelines, 4 QiSA indicator sets, 21 DEGAM primary care S1, S2 and S3 guidelines, 231 Choosing Wisely recommendations, 14 Smarter Medicine recommendations, 17 QI sets from the EU Commission report, 24 ACOVE and 42 NICE indicator sets. We excluded duplicates, services that are not part of the basic mandatory health insurance package in Switzerland and measures that cannot be mapped using claims data such as details of clinical processes, decision making, or communication that are not relevant for reimbursement. A list of 23 potential new QI was sent to the expert group for rating of relevance for public health, clarity of definition, influence on measured aspect of care, risk of undesired effects, and strength of evidence. Overall, there were few discrepancies related to the rating across the group. All potential QI were assigned high values for the aspect “relevance for public health” (mean and median 3 = “rather correct”).
Twenty-one indicators were rated “rather correct” or “fully correct” for all or the majority of the rating criteria. Two indicators failed rating: “dispersion between the health care providers” and “GP emergency visit” were considered to lack influenceability by primary health care providers, clarity of definition, and strength of evidence and were thus excluded by the expert group. Based on in-depth discussions during the workshop, several additional indicators were excluded from the list of potential QI because the expert group questioned that the indicator can be validly constructed based on information available in claims data (see Table
1). The first online workshop resulted in a set of 19 preliminary new indicators qualifying for the feasibility test covering the domains general aspects/ efficiency (4 candidate QI), laboratory testing (4), screening (1), imaging (2), geriatric care (1), osteoarthritis (1), and drug safety (5).
Table 1
Candidate quality indicators excluded in the first and/ or second expert workshop
Indicator excluded in the first expert workshop |
General aspects/ efficiency | Avoidable specialist visits | Proportion of personswith diabetes or hypertension unnecessarily transferred to a specialist for an uncomplicated cause (only considered diagnos: diabetes and hypertension). Estonia national guideline. Uncomplicated is based on an expert evaluation of all diagnosis codes. | The operationalization of the QI is based on ambulatory diagnoses (not available in Swiss health insurance claims data. Approximation using Pharmacy Cost Groups seems inappropriate. |
General aspects/ efficiency | Dispersion between providers | 1) Ratio of primary care professionals (e.g. GPs) to specialists 2) Modified, modified continuity index (MMCI): This index focuses on the dispersion between providers and is based on the number of caretakers and number of visits only. | Redundancy: similar to the existing indicator (“Number of different primary care physicians consulted by an individual insured person”). |
General aspects/ efficiency | Emergency GP visits | 1) Rate of emergency visits for adults 2) Number of emergency visits | Based on health insurance claims no differentiation between emergency and non-emergency possible. |
Indicator excluded in the second expert workshop |
General aspects/ efficiency | Medication after hospital discharge | 1) Proportion of persons with polymedication after vs. before hospitalization 2) Proportion of persons with PIM prescription after vs. before hospitalization | Limited influence of the GP on hospital medication prescription. Measures quality of hospital care/hospital processes. |
Laboratory testing | Vitamin B12 testing | Proportion of persons who received one or more vitamin B12 test | Information about the indication for vitamin B12 testing/ symptoms is missing in the claims data. |
Laboratory testing | Ferritin testing | Proportion of persons who received 1 or more ferritin test | Information about the indication for ferritin testing / symptoms is missing in the claims data. |
Laboratory testing | Complex lymphocyte panel | Proportion of persons who received a complex lymphocyte panel and a CD4 counts | Relatively small number of cases, therefore not suitable for large scale measurement. |
Screening | Colonoscopy | Proportion of persons who received a colonoscopy within 10-year interval | Building a 10-year cohort is not practical in Swiss health insurance claims database |
Imaging | Radiography | 1) Proportion of persons with repeated radiographies with same indication/ localisation 2) Proportion of persons with preoperative chest radiography in absence of a clinical suspicion for intrathoracic pathology | It is not feasible to evaluate the appropriateness of radiography in the claims data. Not specific to primary care. Limited influence of the GP to influence the radiography process of other health care providers. |
Imaging | Ostodensitometry | Proportion of persons received repeated osteodensitometry | Relatively small number of cases, therefore not suitable for large scale measurement.. Clinical information missing. |
Geriatric care | NSAIDs (≥65 years and older) | Proportion of persons with NSAID prescriptions | Complex clinical situations/ multimorbidity limit alternative therapies. Individual case review is needed. |
Drug safety | Potentially inappropriate use of antibiotics | 1) Proportion of persons with ≥1 antibiotic prescription 2) Proportion of women with ≥1 chinolone prescription 3) Proportion of women with ≥1 chinolone prescription who had no urine test | Interpretation without clinical information impossible. Very helpful for decision makring in clinical practice, but not appropriate for aggregated measurement. |
Drug safety | Drug interaction | Proportion of persons with selected adverse drug interactions based on DEGAM S1 list | Heterogeneity in definitions/ lack of broadly accepted list of medication combinations. Low practical relevance and relatively small number of cases, therefore not suitable for large scale measurement. |
The results of the feasibility test were discussed in a second workshop. According to expert consensus 10 candidate indicators failed the feasibility test and were thus excluded:
Two candidates revealed too small case numbers and were thus not suitable for large-scale measurement (“DEXA-Scan” and “Complex lymphocyte panel”). In addition, “drug interaction” lacked a broadly accepted and clearly defined list for precise definition of inappropriate medication combinations. For “colonoscopy”, the recommended screening interval is 10 years. This candidate indicator was excluded because analysis of a 10-year cohort is not practical in Swiss health insurance claims dataset as Swiss residents have the possibility to change their health insurance annually. “Radiography” and “Medication after hospital discharge” were excluded because the indicators did not primarily target quality of primary care and the influence of the primary care physician is generally limited. Other candidate indicators did not pass expert discussions because there is no general negative recommendation against the underlying medical services in the general population and appropriateness of indication depends on the individual clinical situation. Therefore, according to experts, it is not appropriate to judge aspects such as “Vitamin B12 testing”, “Ferritin” or “NSAID (≥65 years and older)” based on claims data only (Table
1).
Based on discussion of current care needs in Swiss primary care, applicability and influenceability, the expert committee decided to specify the following preliminary indicators as follows: “electrolyte panel” was modified to “potassium check in patients with diuretic therapy”. To increase specificity two indicators were adapted: the indicator “arthroscopic knee intervention” was focused on patients without prior physiotherapy, and the indicator “iron infusion” was focused on persons with ≥1 iron infusion and without prior oral iron therapy.
For two of the consented new indicators relating to drug safety, the expert committee recommended to develop a pragmatic approximation of the methodology developed in previous studies using Swiss health insurance claims as a basis for further operationalisation before implementation in practice: “potentially inappropriate opioid prescription” [
18] and “potentially inappropriate proton pump inhibitor prescription” [
19].
In conclusion, based on informal consensus, the experts passed a final set of 9 additional new QI including of 9 additional QI covering the domains general integrated care (2 QI), efficiency (1 QI), laboratory testing (2 QI), osteoarthritis (1), and drug safety (3) (Table
2).
Table 2
Final set of additional quality indicators resulting from consensus process
1 | General aspects/ efficiency | Contiuity of care (UPC index) | Sum of insured persons with consultation at the regular GP | Sum of insured persons with consultation (total: regular GP, GP, specialist) | Continuity of care threshold: Low (< 0.75), High (≥0.75); Only insured persons with ≥3 consultations were considered due to potential bias with small number of consultations. Additional option: Sum of insured persons with consultation at the regular GP/ Sum of insured persons with consultation at the GP |
2 | General aspects/ efficiency | Management continuity between hospital and GP (among persons ≥65 years) | Sum of insured persons aged 65 year or older who encountered a GP within 4 weeks after hospital discharge | Sum of insured persons aged 65 year or older who were discharged from hospital | Supplementary material: Sum of insured persons aged 65 year or older who encountered a healthcare provider within 4 weeks after hospital discharge/ Sum of insured persons aged 65 year or older who were discharged from hospital |
3 | General aspects/ efficiency | Prescription ratio of biosimilars | Sum of insured persons with biosimilar prescriptions | Sum of insured persons with biosimilar or biological prescriptions | |
4 | Laboratory testing | Vitamin D testing | Sum of insured persons who received Vitamin D testing | Sum of insured persons | Additional option: Sum of insured persons who received multiple/ repeated Vitamin D test / Sum of insured persons ≥1 Vitamin D test |
5 | Laboratory testing | Potassium check during diuretic therapy | Sum of insured persons aged 75 with loop diuretic/thiazide prescriptions who received a potassium check within a year | Sum of insured persons aged 75 with loop diuretic prescriptions | |
6 | Osteoarthritis | Arthroscopic knee intervention without prior physiotherapy | Sum of insured persons without physiotherapy 6 months prior to arthroscopic knee intervention | Sum of insured persons with knee arthroscopy | Additional option: Sum of insured persons who had GP consultation of knee imaging 6 months prior to knee arthroscopy/ Sum of insured persons with knee arthroscopy Cave: Exclude accidents from the analytic study sample. |
7 | Drug safety | Potentially inappropriate use of proton pump inhibitor | Sum of insured persons with Potentially inappropriate use of proton pump inhibitor prescription | Sum of insured persons | Operationalization is based on Muheim et al. (2021) |
8 | Drug safety | Potentially inappropriate use of opioids | Sum of insured persons with potentially inappropriate opioid prescription | Sum of insured persons | Operationalization is based on Wertli et al. (2017) |
9 | Drug safety | Iron infusion without prior diagnostics and oral treatment | Sum of insured persons who received an iron infusion without receiving 1 month prior a ferritin test and an oral iron therapy | Sum of insured persons who received an iron infusion | Relevance in women much higher than in men. Additional option: Sum of insured persons who received an iron infusion without prior ferritin test and/or oral iron therapy |
As for the two pre-existing diabetes indicators relating to control of lipid and kidney values stakeholders raised concern that the original definition of the indicator to be calculated in all persons with antidiabetic medication irrespective of current comedication might lead to disincentives. Systematic review of guidelines for the management of diabetes revealed that none of the guidelines contained explicit recommendations on testing depending on comorbidities, comedication, or patient subgroups. The expert groups intensively discussed the topic at both workshops taking controversial evidence of statin therapy for prevention of cardiovascular events in elderly patients and current outcome measurement principles in disease management programs into account. Discussion resulted in consensus that both indicators should be adapted as follows: indicator #19 should be limited to those below the age of 76 and those without current statin therapy. Indicator #20 should be restricted to those without current therapy with angiotensin converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin 2 receptor antagonists (Table
3).
Table 3
Update of pre-existing diabetes quality indicators resulting from consensus process
19 | Diabetes mellitus | Proportion of insured persons below the age of 76 with antidiabetic medication without statin medication receiving control of lipid values per year | Sum of insured persons with the Pharmacy Cost Group “diabetes mellitus” below the age of 76 without statin medication for which control of lipid values was reimbursed per year | Sum of insured persons with the Pharmacy Cost Group “diabetes mellitus” below the age of 76 without statin medication per year |
20 | Diabetes mellitus | Proportion of insured persons with antidiabetic medication without ACE or AT2 inhibitors receiving control of kidney values per year | Sum of insured persons with the Pharmacy Cost Group “diabetes mellitus” without ACE or AT2 inhibitors for which control of kidney values was reimbursed per year | Sum of insured persons with the Pharmacy Cost Group “diabetes mellitus” without ACE or AT2 inhibitors per year |
Discussion
This study presents 9 additional evidence-based measures for quality of primary ambulatory care in Switzerland applicable on pre-existing and nationwide available data. These new indicators extend the previously developed initial set of 24 set which has been principally well received and helped to launch discussion between stakeholders about how to increase quality of ambulatory care. Update of two established diabetes process indicators is likely to increase their relevance for subsequent care.
Quality circles are needed not only for care processes but also for methods of quality assessment [
20,
21]. Currently four of these 24 QI relate to diabetes mellitus and have been implemented in pay-for-performance (P4P) contracts between networks of primary care physicians and a Swiss health insurance [
7]. The specification of two of these indicators is likely to increase relevance of the underlying diagnostic processes for the subsequent care management of diabetes patients and reduce disincentives. Moreover, it may increase acceptance of such measures when both the underlying evidence base and experiences and concerns of those involved in everyday care of these patient groups are regularly reviewed and included in a continuous quality process of methodological instruments [
22].
The present project is an illustrative example of a collaborative approach between practitioners, researchers, experts for local care needs and methodologists bringing together different experiences, perspectives and skills. The QI are developed based on an established and pragmatic consensus process based on international evidence and local public health needs [
23,
24]. It demonstrates that bottom-up initiatives have the potential to result in practical, implementable, and continuously enhanced tools for quality improvement.
Principally, the present 24 pre-existing and 9 additional indicators complement other initiatives and data sources to monitor quality of ambulatory care such as the «Family medicine ICPC Research using Electronic medical records» (FIRE) initiative [
4], the Swiss Primary Care Active Monitoring (SPAM) instrument, 56 indicators related to the organization of primary care in Switzerland [
25], or quality indicators that are currently under development for the longterm nursing care setting [
8].
Several limitations need to be considered. Firstly, indicators were discussed and chosen from the perspective of Swiss mandatory basic health insurance. Therefore, care measures usually performed outside of the basic health insurance package were not systematically addressed in this project (e.g. services covered by supplementary insurance, over the counter medication, or health promotion). However, the Swiss mandatory basic health insurance covers a very broad range of services needed for management of illness, accidents, and motherhood deemed to be effective, appropriate and cost-efficient [
26]. Secondly, we had to systematically exclude all aspects of quality that were not included in the billing system of basic health insurance in Switzerland. Therefore, quality dimensions such as patient satisfaction, quality of life, symptoms, indications or clinical outcomes need to be addressed elsewhere. This also applies to data routinely collected in clinical settings but not transmitted to health insurances such as ambulatory hospital data. Thirdly, the underlying evidence base might systematically under- or overrepresent certain care aspects depending on the presence or absence of evidence. Finally, data for feasibility testing came from a single health insurance, and results might differ when including data from other health insurances. However, the Helsana Group covers about 15% of the Swiss population from all patient groups and Swiss regions. Previous studies showed that the population is largely representative for the general population of Switzerland, and that feasibility testing based on this data is appropriate [
27‐
29].
The present study has implications for research. Firstly, future studies are needed to assess the level of quality in Switzerland based on the presented additional QI. Secondly, the effects of updating two of the diabetes QI on behaviour of physicians, patient outcomes and costs in the context of care regimented in contracts between Swiss physician networks and health insurances needs to be evaluated. Thirdly, future scientific efforts are needed to explore how QI based on health insurance claims data might be enriched with important information systematically lacking in health insurance claims such as patient relevant and patient reported outcomes [
30].
Acknowledgements
We thank previous members of the SQUIPRICA group for their time and valuable input during their active period in the working group:
Dr. med Jan von Overbeck, Consultant in Public Health and Rahel Meier, research fellow, Institute of Primary Care, University of Zürich, Switzerland.
The Swiss Quality Indicator for Primary Care (SQIPRICA) Working Group members were:
PD Dr. med. Dr. med. dent. Jakob M. Burgstaller, PhD, Senior Researcher, Institute of Primary Care, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland;
PD Dr. med. Corinne Chmiel, Head of science, MediX Switzerland and Chief Medical Officer MediX Praxis Friesenberg, Zürich, Switzerland;
Dr. med. Felix Huber, Medical director, MediX group practices Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland;
Dr. med. Philippe Luchsinger, President Assocation of Swiss General and Pediatric Primary Care Physicians (mfe Haus- und Kinderärzte Schweiz), Affoltern am Albis, Switzerland;
Dr. med. Leander Muheim, Management Board, MediX group practices Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland;
PD Dr. Oliver Reich, Head santé24 Telemedicine center, Winterthur, Switzerland;
Prof. Dr. Dr. med. Thomas Rosemann, Director, Institute of Primary Care, University of Zürich, Switzerland;
Felix Schneuwly, Head of Public Affairs Swiss online comparative service Comparis, Zürich; Switzerland,
Prof. Dr. Martin Scherer, Director Department of General Practice/Primary Care, Hamburg University Medical School, Hamburg-Eppendorf, Hamburg, Germany;
Prof. Dr. med. Oliver Senn, Institute of Primary Care, University of Zürich, Zürich, Switzerland,
med. pract. Daniel Tapernoux, medical advisor, Swiss Patient Organisation (SPO), Zürich, Switzerland.
Publisher’s Note
Springer Nature remains neutral with regard to jurisdictional claims in published maps and institutional affiliations.