Eye Care Productivity and Access in the Veterans Affairs Health Care System
Autor: | April Y. Maa, Glenn C. Cockerham, William Delaune, Mary G. Lynch, Joel E. Chasan |
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Rok vydání: | 2017 |
Předmět: |
medicine.medical_specialty
Georgia genetic structures Staffing MEDLINE Efficiency Organizational Ambulatory Care Facilities Health Services Accessibility Military medicine Environmental health Health care medicine Humans Nurse Practitioners Veterans Affairs Productivity Veterans business.industry Public health Public Health Environmental and Occupational Health Workload General Medicine United States Ophthalmology United States Department of Veterans Affairs Physician Assistants Family medicine business |
Zdroj: | Military medicine. 182(1) |
ISSN: | 1930-613X |
Popis: | Eye care in the Veterans Affairs Health Care System is challenged with increasing demand and higher prevalence of patients with complex ocular conditions. Understanding factors that impact eye care productivity and access is necessary for appropriate allocation of resources. The purpose of this study was to determine the impact of various eye clinic personnel on eye care provider productivity and patient access.Utilizing data from the Veterans Health Administration National Data Warehouse, workload and level of staffing were analyzed. Trends in the data were analyzed using descriptive and regression analyses employing both linear and curve fitting modeling methods.There was a significant positive correlation between ophthalmology technicians and ophthalmologist productivity (p0.001), number of unique patients seen per year per provider (p = 0.047), and total yearly number of office visits per provider (p0.001). Similarly, there was a significant positive correlation between number of ophthalmology residents and productivity (p = 0.046) and number of clinic visits per provider (p0.001) but not the number of unique patients seen. Positive correlation was found between optometry technicians and the number of unique patients' seen by optometrists (p = 0.041) and total number of clinic visits per provider (p0.001) but not optometrist productivity. No significant correlations were present for nurses, nurse practitioners, physician assistants, or clerical staff.Eye care technicians provide a cost-effective multiplier effect for provider productivity, especially in ophthalmology clinics, allowing significant increases in total clinic visits and number of unique patients seen per year. |
Databáze: | OpenAIRE |
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