1. Improvement of best practice in early breast cancer
- Author
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Renée Otter, Manda Broekhuis, Marjan Gort, Niek S. Klazinga, Amsterdam Public Health, and Public and occupational health
- Subjects
Adult ,Cancer Research ,medicine.medical_specialty ,Quality management ,CARCINOMA ,IMPACT ,medicine.medical_treatment ,Best practice ,Mammaplasty ,best practice ,MEDLINE ,Breast Neoplasms ,multidisciplinary care ,quality improvement ,surgery ,Breast cancer ,breast cancer ,Multidisciplinary approach ,Oncology Service, Hospital ,MASTECTOMY ,medicine ,MANAGEMENT ,Humans ,Practice Patterns, Physicians' ,CONSERVING TREATMENT ,actionable indicators ,Early breast cancer ,Neoplasm Staging ,Quality of Health Care ,treatment variation ,Physician-Patient Relations ,business.industry ,General surgery ,Multilevel model ,Middle Aged ,CARE ,medicine.disease ,Surgery ,STAGE-I ,Oncology ,Health Care Surveys ,SURVIVAL ,Female ,multilevel analysis ,CONSERVATION THERAPY ,business ,CONSENSUS ,Mastectomy - Abstract
To identify actionable elements for improving best practice, this study examined the relative effects of patient, surgeon and hospital factors on surgical treatment variation of 2,929 early breast cancer patients, diagnosed from January 1998 to January 2002 in the region of the Comprehensive Cancer Centre North-Netherlands. Multilevel logistic regression was used to analyze the hierarchically structured data. Apart from the patient level, 43.3% of the treatment variation was due to the hospital and 56.7% to the surgeon, after adjustment for patient characteristics. Although hospital factors like volume, teaching status, and management and policy contributed to this variation, multidisciplinary care seemed the most important actionable hospital factor. Although the surgeon was shown to be an important starting point for quality improvement, actionable elements seemed difficult to identify as factors like surgeon experience and volume were not conclusive and significant variance on this level remained (sigma(2) = 0.149, SE 0.053). We conclude that multidisciplinary care can improve best practice and that further research into actionable surgeon factors is needed.
- Published
- 2007
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