Volume 22, Number 12, 1648-1655, DOI: 10.1007/s11606-007-0433-8

Published in partnership with the

Logo

Reasons for Not Intensifying Medications: Differentiating “Clinical Inertia” from Appropriate Care

Monika M. Safford, Richard Shewchuk, Haiyan Qu, Jessica H. Williams, Carlos A. Estrada, Fernando Ovalle and Jeroan J. Allison

View Related Documents

Abstract

Background  

“Clinical inertia” has been defined as inaction by physicians caring for patients with uncontrolled risk factors such as blood pressure. Some have proposed that it accounts for up to 80% of cardiovascular events, potentially an important quality problem. However, reasons for so-called clinical inertia are poorly understood.

Objective  

To derive an empiric conceptual model of clinical inertia as a subset of all clinical inactions from the physician perspective.

Methods  

We used Nominal Group panels of practicing physicians to identify reasons why they do not intensify medications when seeing an established patient with uncontrolled blood pressure.

Measurements and Main Results  

We stopped at 2 groups (N = 6 and 7, respectively) because of the high degree of agreement on reasons for not intensifying, indicating saturation. A third group of clinicians (N = 9) independently sorted the reasons generated by the Nominal Groups. Using multidimensional scaling and hierarchical cluster analysis, we translated the sorting results into a cognitive map that represents an empirically derived model of clinical inaction from the physician’s perspective. The model shows that much inaction may in fact be clinically appropriate care.

Conclusions/Recommendations  

Many reasons offered by physicians for not intensifying medications suggest that low rates of intensification do not necessarily reflect poor quality of care. The empirically derived model of clinical inaction can be used as a guide to construct performance measures for monitoring clinical inertia that better focus on true quality problems.

KEY WORDS  clinical inertia - primary care - conceptual model

Fulltext Preview

Image of the first page of the fulltext document