 |
 |

Substituting Diagnostic ServicesNew Tests Only Partly Replace Older Ones
John M. Eisenberg, MD, MBA;
J. Sanford Schwartz, MD;
F. Catherine McCaslin, PhD;
Rachel Kaufman, MPH;
Henry Glick, MS;
Eugene Kroch, PhD
JAMA. 1989;262(9):1196-1200.
Abstract
 |  |
Hospitals' patterns of ancillary service use were examined to determine whether new technologies replace older, more outmoded technologies, and to explore the factors associated with adoption of newer services and abandonment of older services. Annual inpatient use of five pairs of ancillary services was measured for 1978 through 1980 at 63 hospitals in five regions. The diagnostic test pairs consisted of one well-established diagnostic test and one newer service that could largely substitute for the older one and included (1) oral cholecystogram and gallbladder ultrasound; (2) brain scan and computed tomographic head scan; (3) skull roentgenogram and brain scan; (4) bone survey and bone scan; and (5) blood type/cross and type/screen. Use of gallbladder ultrasound increased significantly after its adoption, with small decreases in the use of oral cholecystogram, its paired test. For the other newer tests examined, increased use was not accompanied by significantly decreased use of the paired older service. The strongest predictors of change in patterns of test use were hospital size, number of residencies, occupancy, urban location, and the proportion of specialists on staff. We conclude that diffusion of new diagnostic services occurs gradually and often without concomitant decrease in older, outmoded services; new services generally seem to complement rather than substitute for older ones. Larger hospitals with a greater teaching commitment make a faster transition to the use of new technologies and the abandonment of older ones.
(JAMA. 1989;262:1196-1200)
Author Affiliations
From the Department of Medicine, Section of General Internal Medicine (Drs Eisenberg, Schwartz, and McCaslin and Ms Kaufman and Mr Glick); Department of Economics (Dr Kroch); and the Leonard Davis Institute of Health Economics (Drs Eisenberg, Schwartz, and Kroch and Mr Glick); University of Pennsylvania, Philadelphia.
Footnotes
Reprint requests to Hospital of the University of Pennsylvania, 3400 Spruce St, Philadelphia, PA 19104 (Dr Eisenberg).
CiteULike Connotea Del.icio.us Digg Reddit Technorati Twitter
What's this?
THIS ARTICLE HAS BEEN CITED BY OTHER ARTICLES
The Adoption of Innovations by Provider Organizations in Health Care
Rye and Kimberly
Med Care Res Rev 2007;64:235-278.
ABSTRACT
Ten Lessons for Evidence-Based Technology Assessment
Eisenberg
JAMA 1999;282:1865-1869.
FULL TEXT
Surgical Rates and Operative Mortality for Open and Laparoscopic Cholecystectomy in Maryland
Steiner et al.
NEJM 1994;330:403-408.
ABSTRACT
| FULL TEXT
American Medical Culture and the Health Care Crisis
Linsk
American Journal of Medical Quality 1993;8:174-180.
ABSTRACT
Utilization Review: Health Economics and Cost-Effective Resource Management
Rosenstein
American Journal of Medical Quality 1991;6:85-90.
ABSTRACT
The Case for Reassessment of Health Care Technology: Once Is Not Enough
Banta and Thacker
JAMA 1990;264:235-240.
ABSTRACT
Substituting Diagnostic Services
Kilgore
JAMA 1990;263:1767-1767.
ABSTRACT
Substituting Diagnostic Services
Parrott
JAMA 1990;263:1767-1768.
ABSTRACT
|