Clinical Gerontologist | 2019

Increased Reporting of Exclusionary Diagnoses Inflate Apparent Reductions in Long-Stay Antipsychotic Prescribing

 
 
 
 

Abstract


ABSTRACT Objective: Over the two years following the 2012 introduction of CMS’s National Partnership, combined rates of schizophrenia, Tourette’s, and Huntington’s in US long-stay residents increased 12%. We evaluated trends in reporting of these diagnoses for the subgroup of long-stay residents on antipsychotics. Methods: Retrospective analysis of Virginia Medicaid claims identified annual utilization rates of psychiatric diagnoses for long-stay seniors on antipsychotics. Chi-square analysis compared rates for the year before March, 2012 with the same 12-month period 1 year later. A 5-year pre-existing baseline rate was also obtained. Results: Diagnosis rates for 2011 were unchanged from baseline. Comparing 2011 with 2013, diagnoses rates for schizophrenia, Tourette’s, and Huntington’s combined increased 40% (p < .0001), primarily because schizophrenia reporting nearly doubled (p < .0001). Conclusions: For long-stay seniors on antipsychotics, reporting of schizophrenia, Tourette’s, and Huntington’s began increasing in 2012 and at almost triple the rate CMS described for the general long-stay population. The increased reporting of these diagnoses described by CMS since 2012 appears to be new and concentrated in residents on antipsychotics Clinical Implications: Since antipsychotics prescribed for schizophrenia, Tourette’s, and Huntington’s are excluded from quality-measure auditing, apparent reductions in inappropriate long-stay antipsychotic use since the National Partnership may be exaggerated.

Volume 42
Pages 297 - 301
DOI 10.1080/07317115.2017.1395378
Language English
Journal Clinical Gerontologist

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