Interhospital variation in appropriateness of cataract surgery.

2011 
Objective  The aim of this study was to analyse the inter-hospital variation in the appropriateness of cataract phacoemulsification in Spain. Methods  This observational, multicentre, prospective study involved patients aged 18–90 years. Each phacoemulsification intervention was classified as ‘necessary’, ‘appropriate’, ‘uncertain’ or ‘inappropriate’ according to explicit appropriateness criteria previously established using the RAND/UCLA methodology. A descriptive statistical analysis was performed, followed by univariate and multivariate logistic regression analysis, in order to examine the differences between hospitals. Results  In total, 5063 patients from 15 hospitals were enrolled. The percentage of patients in each hospital who inappropriately underwent phacoemulsification varied from 1.2% to 24.0% (P < 0.0001). The most common inappropriate scenario was that of patients with a simple, unilateral cataract with no limitation of their visual function, with a pre-surgery visual acuity of ≥0.5 in both eyes, and for whom surgical correction would involve low technical complexity. Conclusions  The variation in appropriateness of phacoemulsification cannot be attributed solely to the clinical differences between the hospitals' patients. There is room for improvement in the appropriate indication of phacoemulsification. Measures based on the dissemination of appropriateness criteria might improve quality of care.
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