Physician practice migration and changes in practice style: An empirical analysis of inappropriate diagnostic imaging in primary care

Author:

Young Gary J.123,Zepeda E. David4ORCID,Flaherty Stephen125,Hasan Md Mahmudul678

Affiliation:

1. Center for Health Policy and Healthcare Research Northeastern University Boston Massachusetts USA

2. Bouve College of Health Sciences Northeastern University Boston Massachusetts USA

3. D'Amore‐McKim School of Business Northeastern University Boston Massachusetts USA

4. Department of Health Law, Policy and Management Boston University School of Public Health Boston Massachusetts USA

5. The Roux Institute Northeastern University Portland Maine USA

6. Department of Information Systems and Operations Management University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

7. Department of Pharmaceutical Outcomes and Policy University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

8. Center for Drug Evaluation and Safety (CoDES) University of Florida Gainesville Florida USA

Abstract

AbstractMuch interest exists in physicians’ ability and willingness to adapt their practice styles, as research demonstrates that many physicians practice in ways that are not aligned with the best available scientific evidence. We exploit migration patterns of primary care physicians in Massachusetts over a span of 8 years by tracking physician migrations to practice sites comprised of new peers who shared actual physical working space. We examined whether a patient's likelihood of receiving an inappropriate referral for diagnostic imaging, specifically a magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), was associated with a change in the work environment of the referring physician. Study results indicate that migrating physicians changed their practice style for imaging relatively soon after migration in conformance with the average practice style of their new peer group regardless of whether or not the practice style was aligned with evidence‐based standards for diagnostic imaging. To place our results in context, a 1 percentage point difference in average inappropriate MRI referral rates between a migrating physician's new and previous work environment was associated with approximately a 14% change in the probability that a patient received an inappropriate MRI referral. The effect diminished with greater variability in inappropriate MRI referral rates within the new peer group. The results show that physician practice style may deviate from evidence‐based standards and vary markedly among physicians within a work environment. At the same time, physician practice style is also malleable in either direction—more or less likely to deviate from evidence‐based standards in conformance with the average practice style of their new peer group. These results imply that healthcare managers can employ various institutional‐level interventions to influence physician behavior in the direction of evidence‐based practice by including strategies directed towards developing strong peer influence in physicians’ work environments.

Publisher

SAGE Publications

Subject

Management of Technology and Innovation,Industrial and Manufacturing Engineering,Management Science and Operations Research

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