Title: Australian General Practice Statistics and Classification Centre
1BEACH
Bettering the Evaluation And Care of Health
A continuous study of general practice activity
in Australia Professor Helena Britt
Professor Graeme Miller
Visit sponsored by Centre for Health Services and
Policy Research at UBC Canadian Institute for
Health Information Canadian Institutes of Health
Research Canadian Health Services Research
Foundation
2Australian GP Statistics Classification Centre
(GPStats)
- A collaborating unit of the Australian Institute
of Health and Welfare and the University of
Sydney. - Responsible for the BEACH program which is
conducted under the AIHW Act, with Ethics
approval from the University and AIHW Ethics
Committees - We are researchers, so data quality is essential
3BEACH aims
- to provide a reliable and valid continuous
national data source of timely GPpatient
encounter information - to assess patient risk factors and health states
and their relationship to morbidity and health
service activity.
4Current status of BEACH
- Began April 1, 1998
- Now in its 8th year (began April 1, 2005)
- Over 7,500 participating GPs to date
- Data available about 725,000 encounters
- Data being used by, Government, researchers,
industry - Continuity allows measures of change
5BEACH methods
- Paper based data collection
- National GP random sample (drawn by DHAC)
- 1,000 GPs per year
- 20 per week x 50 weeks a year - ever changing
- 100 consecutive encounters per GP
- All types of encounters included
- National data for 100,000 encounters p.a.
- All questions approved by the AIHW Ethics
Committee
6BEACH variables
- G.P characteristics (GP completed
questionnaire) - Patient characteristics
- Encounter details
- Patient reasons for encounter (up to 3)
- Problems managed (up to 4)
- Management (of each problem)
7G.P Characteristics
- age
- sex
- country of graduation
- years in general practice
- FRACGP
- currently in training program
- practice location (State,RRMA, ARIA, SEIFA)
- practice size
- use of computers
- other variables over the years
8 Patient characteristics
- Age (from DoB)
- Sex
- Status to the practice (new/seen before)
- NESB (Yes/no)
- Aboriginal (self ID Yes/no)
- Torres Straight Islander (self ID Yes/no)
- Health care card holder (Yes/no)
- VA card holder (yes/no)
- Reasons for encounter (up to 3)
9Encounter data
- Date, place/item no/direct or indirect, paid
by? - Problems managed (up to 4)
- and their status (new/old to patient)
- Management of each problem
- medications (up to 4 per problem),
(new/continued) - procedures/ clinical treatments (up to 2 per
problem) - referrals (up to 2 per encounter)
- pathology (up to 5) imaging (up to 2) ordered
10The GP sample frame
- Universal medical insurance scheme, Australian
- Medicare claim files updated every 3 months -
includes all Gps who claimed a minimum of 375 GP
items of service in most recent 3 months. - Australian Government Department of Health and
Ageing holds the sample frame and draw sample
each quarter for BEACH. - Ensures inclusion of practising GPs, and most
part-timers (excludes very part-time, one locum
per year etc)
11GP sample
- 1000 GPs pa needed - but sample quarterly to
ensure up to date - random from reshuffled sample
frame - Reward to GPs is points towards their quality
assurance requirements, QA cycle is 3 years -
therefore restart sample frame every 3 years. - Once selected GP is removed from sample framefor
3 years - Provided with name, address, phone number,
number of claims previous quarter, number of
claims previous 12 months.
12Centralised data entry
- GP profile data (questionnaire) entered in
Profile database - Coder enters encounter form data into BEACHHEAD
(Access database)- free to ask questions of
senior staff - BEACH-HEAD specifically designed for speedand
accuracy- data coded and auto-classified(staffing
, training, speed, discussed later) - QA programe for data entry
13Data entry QA
- QA checks of 1/1 to 1/10 depending on coders
experience highlight issues for training - Corrections made in data errors by coder
- Standard programs run in Access for errors (e.g.
lt12 years, pregnancy/family planning) - Identified issues checked on paper record
- Data imported to SAS each 3 months
- Standard SAS programs applied for more complex
checks - If the GP wrote outlier script it is not changed,
if data entry error, it is changed)
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15SAND (Supplementary Analysis of Nominated Data )
- For each 100 forms - questions asked of the
patient - 40 patient risk factors
- 30 Subject 1
- 30 Subject 2
- Ten x 5 week blocks
- Sample size for Subject about 3,000
- Sometimes repeat subject to increase sample size
(e.g. estimates of indigenous encounters
estimates of disease prevalence, management of
asthma) - Range prevalence, management, effectiveness can
be semi-longitudinal
16 Classification ... ICPC-2
The International Classification of Primary Care
- the World Organisation of Family Doctors
(Wonca) - part of WHO Family of
Classifications - Australian standard for
reporting GP and patient self reported
data ICPC-2 PLUS The Family Medicine Research
Centre -
an interface terminology based on ?1 million
encounter records - classified according to
ICPC-2, completing classification to ICD 10.
17ICPC-2 PLUS
- An interface terminology developed from the
language of GPs - released in 1995 - from gt1 million encounter records
- including free text descriptions of
- 1.5 million problem labels, 1.5 million RFEs,
- 250,000 other treatments, 150,000 pathology
orders - 40,000 imaging test orders, 40,000 referrals
- ? input from 1500 GPs in gt400 practices
using it in their EHRs on a daily basis
18BEACH pharmaceutical data
- Drug name
- Strength ?
- Dose ? PDD
- Frequency ?
- Number of repeats
- Prescribed/ advised/ supplied
- New Vs continued
19Classifying Drugs - CAPS Coding Atlas for
Pharmaceutical Substances
- Classifies medications prescribed, advised,
provided - Drug Class (eg antibiotics)
-
- Drug sub group (eg broad spectrum penicillins)
- Generic (amoxycillin)
- Brand (Amoxil)
- At generic level also classified to
- Anatomic Therapeutic Chemical (ATC)
classification (WHO) -
20Post-stratification weights
- To ensure national representation of GP
encounters, each year the data are weighted - 1. To correct for the under-representation of
young GPs lt35 years (small but important) - 2. To give more weighting to the encounters of
busy GPs and less to (e.g.) part-time GPs data
are weighted by HIC A1 Medicare claims previous
quarter.
21Observed vs expected age distribution by state
Expected MBS (A1) claims, observed BEACH
sample
22Observed vs expected age distribution by state
23Standard reports(examples see - www.fmrc.org.au)
- Problem based report
- group ( diabetes - all, arthritis - all)
- more specific group (osteoarthritis)
- ICPC-2 level (IDDM)
- ICPC-2 PLUS (osteoarthritis of shoulder)
- Covers
- GPs, patients, RFEs, other morbidity managed,
medications, other treatments, referrals,
investigations/tests
24RFEs Depression 54.2 Prescriptions
(all) 14.1 Weakness/tiredness 4.7 Sleep
disturbance 4.6 Anxiety 4.2
Acute stress reaction 3.8 Back complaint
3.5 Cardiac check-up 3.1
Hypertension/High BP 2.3 General check-up
2.2
Patients Total New Female 67.9
67.8 lt1-14 0.6 0.8 1524
7.7 11.7 2544
39.9 42.0 4564 31.8
31.5 6574 10.1 7.1 75
10.0 6.8
Referrals Psychiatrist 4.4 Psychologist
1.6 Counsellor 0.8 Other health
prof l0.4 Hospital 0.4 Mental health team
0.3 Hospital psychiatrist 0.3 Clinic
psychiatrist 0.2
Pathology Chemistry 5.3 Haematology
2.4 Microbiology 0.3
DEPRESSION N 3,367 (2.4 of all problems
managed) New 666 (19.8 of all depression)
Other problems managed with depression Hypertensio
n 6.7 Back complaint 3.1 Menopause complaints
2.7 Diabetes 2.2 Sleep disturbance
2.1 Osteoarthritis 2.0 Lipid disorder
2.0 URTI 1.9 Immunisation/vacc (all)
1.9 Oesophageal disease 1.8 Asthma 1.5
Prescriptions Sertraline 14.8 Paroxetine
9.0 Fluoxetine hcl 7.1 Moclobemide
6.9 Dothiepin 6.3 Venlafaxine 3.7
Temazepam 3.4 Citalopram 3.3
Amitriptyline 3.3
Clinical treatments Counsel psych NOS
34.2 Counsel NOS 3.7 Advice medication
3.6 Advice NOS 1.5 Advice
treatment 1.2 Counsel relationship 0.9
Counsel relaxation 0.5
25 Standard reports
- Participating organisations up to 20 standard
reports (or equivalent) per year - Delivery within a week (or a day if desperate)
- Drug based reports
- Drug group (Serum lipid reducing agents)
- Sub-group (HMG CoA reductase inhibitors)
- Generic (simvastatin)
- Brand
- Covers
- GPs, patients, RFEs, morbidity, PDD
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27GP characteristicsBEACH (2003-2004) (n983)
28Patient characteristics - BEACH
29Rates per 100 encountersBEACH (2004-05)
30Management rates per 100 problems BEACH (2004-05)
31Most common problems managed (2004-05)
- Rate/100 encs 95CIs
- Hypertension 8.9 (8.4 - 9.4)
- URTI 5.6 (5.1 - 6.0)
- Immunisation/vacc 4.6 (4.1 - 5.2)
- Depression 3.7 (3.5 - 3.9)
- Lipid disorder 3.3 (3.1 - 3.6)
- Diabetes 3.2 (3.0 - 3.4)
- Back complaint 2.8 (2.6 - 3.0)
- Osteoarthritis 2.8 (2.6 - 3.0)
- Acute bronchitis 2.4 (2.1 2.7)
- Asthma 2.3 (2.2 - 2.5)
32 Most common prescribed medications(2004-05)
- Rate/100 encs 95CIs
- Amoxycillin 3.5 (3.2 - 3.8)
- Paracetamol 2.7 (2.4 - 3.0)
- Cephalexin 2.4 (2.2 - 2.6)
- Paracetamolcodeine 2.0 (1.8 - 2.2)
- Salbutamol 2.0 (1.8 - 2.2)
- Amoxycillin/potass.clav.1.7 (1.5 - 1.9)
- Salbutamol 1.4 (1.3 - 1.6)
- Atorvastatin 1.4 (1.2 - 1.5)
33The BEACH drug database
Extrapolated total annual prescriptions by GPs
34Prescribing rates of NSAIDs for all arthritis
problems
35Dissemination
- Report of annual results - week 1 December
- Single page abstracts for each SAND on web
- 1 or 2 topic books per year (e.g. Locality
matter, pathology ordering, 65 yrs ) - ? 10 peer reviewed papers p.a.
- Monthly topic summaries in Aust. Fam Physician
- Bytes from BEACH in GP Review (RACGP quarterly)
- Regular input into GP weekly newspapers
- 15-20 paper presentations at conferences p.a.
36The interactive web-server
- Data available April 2000-September 2005 (access
only to periods purchased) - queries - problem based, medication based,
pathology imaging based - limited selected analyses available
- only accessible to participating organisations
- only accessible using SecureID
37Users AIHW (CIHI)
- burden of disease
- disease specific reports (e.g. Asthma)- use
multiple data sources (with mortality,
hospitalisations etc) - Indigenous health
- workforce assessment
- measuring equity and access
- Veterans health
38Users- Government
- WAMTCs
- monitor health priority areas
- post-marketing surveillance (Drug Utilisation
Sub-Committee) - workforce planning
- costing of services - indiginous health
- studying leakage
- pre-post evaluation of government initiatives
- quality use of medicines program (National
Prescribing Service) - costing of quality use of pathology imaging
(costly!) - patient safetly adverse events monitoring
- measuring Government performance (Productivity
Commission) - etc. etc. etc.
39Other users
- The profession
- curriculum development (undergrad, vocational,
CME) - workforce planning
- comparison of groups of GPs (e.g. rural-met,
FRACGP -not) - assessment of quality of care
- pre-post measurement of interventions (e.g.
Indigenous) - Health economics consultants
- the pharmaceutical industry
- academic researchers (planning and validation)
- Consultants to Governments
40Available through http//www.fmrc.org.au (go to
BEACH and select publications) Also see
Abstracts in the publication section of our
website Hard copies of reports
from http//www.aihw.gov.au (cost 15-27 each
book in GEP series) AGPSCC Phone 61 2 9845
8151 email gpstats_at_fmrc.org.au