Med
Care 1995 Jan;33(1):90-105
Geographic variation in utilization of cataract surgery.
Javitt JC, Kendix M, Tielsch JM, Steinwachs DM, Schein OD, Kolb MM, Steinberg
EP.
Worthen Center for Eye Care Research, Department of Ophthalmology, Georgetown
University Medical Center, Washington, DC 20007.
Cataract surgery is the most frequently performed surgical procedure
on Medicare beneficiaries, with an annual cost to the Medicare program
of more than $3.4 billion. In this study, the relationship between demographic,
environmental, and provider-related factors, and the likelihood that cataract
surgery will be performed on a Medicare beneficiary were assessed. The
association between likelihood of cataract surgery and patient age, sex,
race, income, and latitude of residence was examined, as was the association
with the supply of ophthalmologists and optometrists in each region, and
the allowed charge for cataract surgery and cost of practice in a region.
This cross-sectional, population-based study used administrative data.
Both regional models, using least-squares regression and person-based
models, using logistic regression were employed. A random 5% sample of
1986 and 1987 Medicare beneficiaries, 65 years of age and older, were
included in the study. Medicare beneficiaries who lacked continuous Part
A and Part B coverage during 1986 and 1987, or who were enrolled in a
health maintenance organization at any time during this 2-year period
of observation were excluded from the study to make certain that complete
utilization data were available for each individual. Rate of cataract
surgery per 1,000 Medicare beneficiaries in each Bureau of Economic Analysis
Economic Area (BEAEA) and the likelihood of an individual with particular
characteristics undergoing cataract surgery were determined in separate
regression models. The mean annual rate of cataract surgery during 1986
and 1987 in the 181 BEAEAs was 25.4 surgeries per 1,000 persons 65 years
of age or older (standard deviation = 6.2, coefficient of variation =
0.24). Both the regional model and the person-based model detected an
association between a higher rate of and personal likelihood of cataract
surgery and female gender, more southerly latitude, higher concentration
of optometrists per 1,000 Medicare beneficiaries, and higher allowed charge
for cataract surgery, after adjusting for variation in practice expense.
The person-based model additionally demonstrated that increased likelihood
of undergoing cataract surgery was associated with increasing age from
65 to 94 years, white race, and living in a zip-code area with mean income
greater than $15,000. Neither analysis detected a statistically significant
association between the concentration of ophthalmologists per 1,000 Medicare
beneficiaries and the regional rate of, or an individual's likelihood
of, cataract surgery. Compared with the geographic variation in provision
of other surgical procedures, the variation in cataract surgery across
large geographic areas observed in this analysis was relatively low.(ABSTRACT
TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
PMID: 7823650 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE]