Measuring Physician Practice Site Characteristics: A Comparison of Data from SK&A and a Practice Site Survey

Measuring Physician Practice Site Characteristics: A Comparison of Data from SK&A and a Practice Site Survey

Published: Apr 01, 2021
Publisher: Health Services Research, vol. 56, issue 2
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Authors

Kristin A. Maurer

Nikkilyn Morrison Hensleigh

Deborah Peikes

Objective

To evaluate the comparability of commercially available practice site data from SK&A with survey data to understand the implications of using SK&A data for health services research.

Data Sources

Responses to the Comprehensive Primary Care Plus (CPC+) Practice Survey and SK&A data.

Study Design

Comparison of CPC+ Practice Survey responses to SK&A information for 2698 primary care practice sites.

Data Collection

CPC+ Practice Survey data collected through a web‐only survey from April through September 2017, and SK&A data purchased in November 2016.

Principal Findings

Information was similar across data sources, although some discrepancies were common. For example, 56% of practice sites had differences in the reported number of practitioners, and larger sites tended to have larger differences. Among practice sites with 1 practitioner in the survey, only 1.3% had a difference of 3 or more practitioners between the data sources, whereas 63% of practice sites with 11 or more practitioners had a difference of 3 or more practitioners.

Conclusions

Discrepancies between data sources could reflect differences of interpretation when defining practice site characteristics, changes over time in those characteristics, or data errors in either SK&A or the survey. Researchers using SK&A data should consider possible ramifications for their studies.

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