R. Sacha Bhatia
Women's College Hospital
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Publication
Featured researches published by R. Sacha Bhatia.
BMJ Quality & Safety | 2015
Wendy Levinson; Marjon Kallewaard; R. Sacha Bhatia; Daniel Wolfson; Sam Shortt; Eve A. Kerr
Much attention has been paid to the inappropriate underuse of tests and treatments but until recently little attention has focused on the overuse that does not add value for patients and may even cause harm. Choosing Wisely is a campaign to engage physicians and patients in conversations about unnecessary tests, treatments and procedures. The campaign began in the United States in 2012, in Canada in 2014 and now many countries around the world are adapting the campaign and implementing it. This article describes the present status of Choosing Wisely programs in 12 countries. It articulates key elements, a set of five principles, and describes the challenges countries face in the early phases of Choosing Wisely. These countries plan to continue collaboration including developing metrics to measure overuse.
Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2013
R. Sacha Bhatia; Creagh E. Milford; Michael H. Picard; Rory B. Weiner
OBJECTIVES This study sought to prospectively study the impact of an appropriate use criteria (AUC)-based educational intervention on transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) ordering among house staff on the inpatient general internal medicine service at an academic medical center. BACKGROUND AUC for TTE were developed in response to concerns about inappropriate use of TTE. To date, educational interventions based on the AUC to reduce inappropriate use of TTE have not been prospectively studied. METHODS A prospective, time series analysis of an educational intervention was conducted and then compared with TTE ordering on the same medical service during a control period. The intervention consisted of: 1) a lecture to house staff on the 2011 AUC for TTE; 2) a pocket card that applied the AUC to common clinical scenarios; and 3) biweekly e-mail feedback regarding ordering behavior. TTE ordering was tracked over the intervention period on a daily basis and feedback reports were e-mailed at 2-week intervals. The primary outcome was the proportion of inappropriate and appropriate TTE ordered during the intervention period. RESULTS Of all TTEs ordered in the control and study periods, 99% and 98%, respectively, were classifiable using the 2011 AUC. During the study period, there was a 26% reduction in the number of TTE ordered per day compared with the number ordered during the control period (2.9 vs. 3.9 TTE, p < 0.001). During the study period, the proportion of inappropriate TTE was significantly lower (5% vs. 13%, p < 0.001) and the proportion of appropriate TTE was significantly higher (93% vs. 84%, p < 0.001). CONCLUSIONS A simple educational intervention produced a significant reduction in the proportion of inappropriate TTE and increased the proportion of appropriate TTE ordered on an inpatient academic medical service. This study provides a practical approach for using the AUC to reduce the number of inappropriate TTE. Further study in other practice environments is warranted.
BMJ Quality & Safety | 2015
R. Sacha Bhatia; Wendy Levinson; Samuel Shortt; Ciara Pendrith; Elana Fric-Shamji; Marjon Kallewaard; Wilco C. Peul; Jeremy Veillard; Adam G. Elshaug; Ian Forde; Eve A. Kerr
The Choosing Wisely campaign began in the USA in 2012 to encourage physicians and patients to discuss inappropriate and potentially harmful tests, treatments and procedures. Since its inception, the campaign has grown substantially and has been adopted by 12 countries around the world. Of great interest to countries implementing the campaign, is the effectiveness of Choosing Wisely to reduce overutilisation. This article presents an integrated measurement framework that may be used to assess the impact of a Choosing Wisely campaign on physician and provider awareness and attitudes on low-value care, provider practice behaviour and overuse of low-value services.
Value in Health | 2012
Walter P. Wodchis; R. Sacha Bhatia; Kori Leblanc; Nazanin Meshkat; Dante Morra
OBJECTIVES To systematically review and synthesize the literature on the costs of atrial fibrillation (AF) with attention to study design and costing methods, geography, and intervention approaches. METHODS A systematic search for previously published studies reporting the costs for AF patients was conducted. Data were analyzed in three steps: first by evaluating overall system costs; second by evaluating the relative contribution of specific cost components; and third by examining variations across study designs, across primary treatment approach, and by geography. Finally, a specific review of the treatment costs associated with anticoagulation treatment was examined given the clinical importance and attention given to these costs in the literature. RESULTS The literature search resulted in 115 articles. On review of the abstracts or full text of these articles, 21 articles met all study criteria and reported on health system AF-related direct costs. A further six articles focused exclusively on anticoagulation costs for patients with AF. The overall average annual system cost across 27 estimates obtained from the literature was
Circulation-cardiovascular Quality and Outcomes | 2015
Jack V. Tu; Anna Chu; Linda R. Donovan; Dennis T. Ko; Gillian L. Booth; Karen Tu; Laura C. Maclagan; Helen Guo; Peter C. Austin; William Hogg; Moira K. Kapral; Harindra C. Wijeysundera; Clare L. Atzema; Andrea S. Gershon; David A. Alter; Douglas S. Lee; Cynthia A. Jackevicius; R. Sacha Bhatia; Jacob A. Udell; Mohammad R. Rezai; Therese A. Stukel
5450 (SD =
Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2014
R. Sacha Bhatia; David M. Dudzinski; Rajeev Malhotra; Creagh E. Milford; Danita M. Yoerger Sanborn; Michael H. Picard; Rory B. Weiner
3624) in 2010 Canadian dollars and ranged from a low of
Jacc-cardiovascular Imaging | 2013
Saul Blecker; R. Sacha Bhatia; John J. You; Douglas S. Lee; David A. Alter; Julie T. Wang; Hannah J. Wong; Jack V. Tu
1,632 to a high of
Canadian Medical Association Journal | 2015
K. R. Kirkham; Duminda N. Wijeysundera; Ciara Pendrith; Ryan Ng; Jack V. Tu; Andreas Laupacis; Michael J. Schull; Wendy Levinson; R. Sacha Bhatia
21,099. About one-third of these costs could be attributed to anticoagulation management. The largest cost component was acute care, followed by outpatient and physician and then medication-related costs. CONCLUSION AF-related medical costs are high, reflecting resource-intensive and long-term treatments including anticoagulation treatment. These costs, accompanied with increasing prevalence, justify increased attention to the management of patients with AF. Future studies of AF cost should ensure a broad assessment of the incremental direct medical and societal cost associated with this diagnosis.
Journal of The American Society of Echocardiography | 2017
Anthony D. Bai; Marilyn Steinberg; Adrienne Showler; Lisa Burry; R. Sacha Bhatia; George Tomlinson; Chaim M. Bell; Andrew M. Morris
Background—The CArdiovascular HEalth in Ambulatory care Research Team (CANHEART) is conducting a unique, population-based observational research initiative aimed at measuring and improving cardiovascular health and the quality of ambulatory cardiovascular care provided in Ontario, Canada. A particular focus will be on identifying opportunities to improve the primary and secondary prevention of cardiovascular events in Ontario’s diverse multiethnic population. Methods and Results—A population-based cohort comprising 9.8 million Ontario adults ≥20 years in 2008 was assembled by linking multiple electronic survey, health administrative, clinical, laboratory, drug, and electronic medical record databases using encoded personal identifiers. The cohort includes ≈9.4 million primary prevention patients and ≈400 000 secondary prevention patients. Follow-up on clinical events is achieved through record linkage to comprehensive hospitalization, emergency department, and vital statistics administrative databases. Profiles of cardiovascular health and preventive care will be developed at the health region level, and the cohort will be used to study the causes of regional variation in the incidence of major cardiovascular events and other important research questions. Conclusions—Linkage of multiple databases will enable the CANHEART study cohort to serve as a powerful big data resource for scientific research aimed at improving cardiovascular health and health services delivery. Study findings will be shared with clinicians, policy makers, and the public to facilitate population health interventions and quality improvement initiatives.
BMJ Quality & Safety | 2017
Karen Born; Angela Coulter; Angela Han; Moriah E. Ellen; Wilco Peul; Paul Myres; Robyn Lindner; Daniel Wolfson; R. Sacha Bhatia; Wendy Levinson
OBJECTIVES This study sought to prospectively study the impact of an appropriate use criteria (AUC)-based educational intervention on outpatient transthoracic echocardiography (TTE) ordering by physicians-in-training. BACKGROUND AUC were developed in response to concerns about inappropriate utilization. It is unknown whether an educational intervention can reduce inappropriate outpatient TTE. METHODS We conducted a randomized control trial in which physicians-in-training were randomized to an AUC-based educational intervention or a control group at an academic medical center in Boston, Massachusetts. The primary endpoints were the rates of inappropriate and appropriate TTE. RESULTS For the cardiology physicians-in-training, the proportion of inappropriate TTE was significantly lower in the intervention than in the control group (13% vs. 34%, p < 0.001). As a corollary, the proportion of appropriate TTE ordered by the intervention group was significantly higher than that of the control group (81% vs. 58%, p < 0.001). The odds of ordering an appropriate TTE in the cardiology intervention group was 2.7 (95% confidence interval [CI]: 1.5 to 5.1, p = 0.002) relative to the control group. The internal medicine physicians-in-training ordered a small number of TTE overall, and there was a trend toward significant odds of ordering an appropriate TTE in the intervention group relative to the control group (odds ratio [OR]: 8.1, 95% CI: 0.95 to 69.0, p = 0.055). Six clinical scenarios accounted for 75% of all inappropriate TTE, with the 3 most common inappropriate indications being routine surveillance (<1 year) of known cardiomyopathy without a change in clinical status, routine surveillance of known small pericardial effusion, and routine surveillance of ventricular function with known coronary artery disease and no change in clinical status. CONCLUSIONS In cardiology fellows with a high rate of ordering inappropriate TTE, an AUC-based educational and feedback intervention reduced the proportion of inappropriate outpatient TTE and increased the proportion of appropriate outpatient TTE. (Educational Intervention to Reduce Outpatient Inappropriate Transthoracic Echocardiograms; NCT01944202).