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Quality Assessment in Hypertension: Analysis of Process and Outcome Methods

List of authors.
  • Fred T. Nobrega, M.D., M.P.H.,
  • George W. Morrow, Jr., M.D.,
  • Robert K. Smoldt, M.B.A.,
  • and Kenneth P. Offord, M.S.

Abstract

Despite efforts to develop methods for measuring the quality of medical care, no satisfactory mechanism has been established. Our study, using hypertension as a clinical model, evaluated process and outcomes separately and then compared the two. Physician adherence to an extensive process list varied substantially from established criteria. No statistically significant association was detected between process and outcome. Regression analysis examined the relation between outcome diastolic pressure and 12 predictive variables that included patient satisfaction and social class. The only statistically significant variables (P<0.05) related to outcome blood pressure were age, initial blood pressure and weight. The inability to identify a relation between various process items and outcome suggests that, in determining a successful outcome for hypertensive patients, the selective use of process by the physician may be more effective than adherence to a rigid criteria list. (N Engl J Med 296:145–148, 1977)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by a grant (106S) from the Northlands Regional Medical Program.

We are indebted to Mrs. Mary Doran, L.P.N., who obtained vital follow-up information at the time of the home interview, to Mrs. Eda G. Mohler, R.R.A., for her efforts in retrieving the medical records and collecting the necessary process information, to Mrs. Patricia M. Polikowsky and Mrs. Kathleen L. DeBoer for assistance, to the Mayo Criteria and Standards Committee, Drs. Sheldon G. Sheps, L. A. Brennan, Jr., R. W. Hill, and Earl T. Carter, who provided the process criteria and outcome estimates and to Dr. William Fifer for assistance in the design and conduct of the study.

Author Affiliations

From the Mayo Clinic and Mayo Foundation, Rochester, MN (address reprint requests to Dr. Nobrega at the Health Care Research Unit, Mayo Clinic, Rochester, MN 55901).

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