Showing posts with label population health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label population health. Show all posts

Tuesday, May 10, 2016

Making Sense of Hot-Spots & Cold Spots

Today HealthLandscape is releasing Geospatial Brief #2 “Where are “Hot Spots” of Medicare Spending and Preventable Hospitalizations and “Cold Spots” of Preventive Care.  Brief #2 focuses on using advanced geospatial methods to identify priority areas for preventive care. This blog briefly describes different ways of defining hot spots and cold spots. We argue that it doesn’t necessarily matter how these terms are defined, as there are multiple methods for using these techniques to identify priority regions.

The term “hot-spotting” has become popular in the healthcare realm thanks to the work of Dr. Jeffrey Brenner in Camden, NJ, who identified a very small group of super-utilizers, which made up a disproportionate share of hospitalizations, ER visits, and healthcare costs.  These “super-utilizers” were often concentrated in small geographic areas, identified as hot spots, such as apartment buildings or city blocks, which were poor, under-resourced areas. Thus, by focusing on these hot-spots and providing coordinated care and social services, Brenner and his team were able to improve health, reduce unnecessary hospital visits, and lower costs (Gawande, 2011).  Brenner’s hot-spotting approach has been very successful and is being replicated in regions throughout the U.S., with the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation dedicating substantial funding for hot-spotting programs (RWJ, 2012).

Dr. John Westfall took an alternate view, wondering if the problem wasn’t really hot spots, but rather cold spots – “communities in which the social determinants of health, support, and access to primary care have broken down.” (Westfall, 2013).  Westfall explains that identifying cold spots and working to improve the conditions in these areas could have a larger overall impact on improving population health.  However, Westfall argues that addressing the needs of cold-spot communities is much more complex than dealing with a small group of super-utilizers, and requires a broader, communities of solution approach (Griswold et al., 2013).

Hot Spots and Cold Spots in Geospatial Analysis
While general awareness of the terms hot spots and cold spots have increased, these terms have different meanings in the field of geospatial analysis, where hot spots are defined as clusters of high values and cold spots as clusters of low values. These clusters are compared to random geographic patterns to test if they are statistically significant. Several methods exist for exploring hot spots and cold spots, including the Local Moran’s I (Anselin et al., 2006). For example, if you map Diabetes prevalence (Medicare) for counties in the U.S. (see map below), you would find clusters of high values throughout the southeast and Appalachia, and clusters of low values in the upper Midwest and throughout the Western part of the U.S. To test for statistically significant Diabetes hot spots, you would have to use advanced geospatial methods to determine if the clusters of high values are significantly different from random geographic patterns.


Diabetes Prevalence by County (Medicare) 
Source: CMS Geographic Variation, 2013; HealthLandscape Medicare Data Portal

Making Sense of Hot Spots and Cold Spots
There are similarities in how hot spots and cold spots described above are defined.  For example, if you had census tract data for 30-day readmission rates from a local hospital, you could map these data and visually identify census tracts with high rates (i.e., hot spots using Brenner’s definition).  Next, you could use geospatial methods (such as a Local Moran’s I) to determine if the clusters of high readmission rates are significantly different from a random pattern of hospital readmissions (i.e., hot spots using geospatial definition).  Similarly, you could map census tract education data to visually identify census tracts with low levels of education (i.e., cold spots using Westfall’s definition), and then use Local Moran’s I to determine if clusters of low education census tracts are statistically different from random patterns of education levels (cold spots using geospatial definition).

While there are many different ways to define hot spots and cold spots, there are all useful for identifying priority areas for place-based interventions. The key issue for future research is how we use the results of hot-spot and cold-spot analyses to target interventions.

Michael Topmiller
GIS Strategist
HealthLandscape 

References
Anselin, Luc, Ibnu Syabri and Youngihn Kho (2006). GeoDa: An Introduction to Spatial Data Analysis. Geographical Analysis 38 (1), 5-22.

Centers for Medicare and Medicaid (CMS), 2013. Geographic Variation Public Use File

Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care, 2013. Data Downloads.

Gawande, Atul. (2011). “The Hot Spotters: Can we lower medical costs by giving the neediest of patients better care?” The New Yorker. January 24, 2011.

Griswold, Kim S., Sarah E. Lesko, and John M. Westfall (Folsom Group). (2013). Communities of Solution: Partnerships for Population Health. Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine 26(3): 232-238.

HealthLandscape Medicare Data Portal

Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, (2012). “Expanding “Hot Spotting” to New Communities: What We’re Learning about Coordinating Health Care for High-Utilizers.”

Topmiller, Michael. (2016). “Do Regions with More Preventive Care have Lower Spending and Fewer Hospitalizations?”  HealthLandscape Geospatial Research Brief #1.
Accessed at http://www.healthlandscape.org/Geospatial-Analysis.cfm

Westfall, John M. (2013). Cold Spotting: Linking Primary Care and Public Health to Create Communities of Solution. Journal of the American Board of Family Medicine, 26(3): 239-240.

Wednesday, October 28, 2015

What Counts? Data Forum Focuses on Innovations in Population Health

How do we move from data to action? I’m excited to be joined by a series of speakers this Thursday (October 29th) at Data! Fostering Health Innovation in Kentucky and Ohio in Erlanger, KY, where we will be exploring this question and presenting recent innovations in improving population health.

As part of a panel focusing on the validity and use of data to address social determinants, I’ll be presenting HealthLandscape’s most recent work on Community Vital Signs, an approach for incorporating community indicators into electronic health records.  Also joining me on the panel are Katie Bachmeyer from Starfire, and Dr. Robert Kahn from Cincinnati’s Children’s Hospital.
Keynote speakers for the conference include Niall Brennan, the Chief Data Officer of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and Naomi Cytron, Senior Research Associate in the Community Development Department for the Federal Reserve Bank of San Francisco.
 
Michael Topmiller
Health GIS Research Specialist 
HealthLandscape 
 

Thursday, August 27, 2015

Population Health Mapper Wins at ESRI User Conference!


HealthLandscape is recognized as one of the top three GIS applications at the ESRI 2015 User Application Fair.

HealthLandscape is privileged to regularly attend and WIN at the User Application Fair for the fifth year in a row. Our very own Jene Grandmont presented the Health Landscape Population Health Mapper.  The Population Health Mapper enables users to select metrics from the seven categories and use a slider bar to set thresholds. By default, thresholds are set at values that represent national benchmarks.  The tool will highlight those counties that are outside of the national benchmark, or will incrementally shade or remove counties depending on how the user modifies the thresholds for selected indicators.  A huge thank you to everyone who participated and allowed us to continue on our winning streak! 

2015-08-26_1542.png

See our account from the ESRI User Conference 2015 here: http://healthlandscape.blogspot.com/2015/08/report-from-esri-user-conference-2015.html 

Claire Meehan
User Engagement Specialist
HealthLandscape


Learn more about the Population Health Mapper Tuesday September 9th at 11:00AM!


Learn more about HealthLandscape with our online Webinars and Training

Tuesday, August 11, 2015

Report From Esri User Conference 2015


The Esri International User Conference takes place each summer in San Diego, California. The HealthLandscape application is built on the esri ArcGIS platform, so we regularly attend the conference to discuss our work and to stay current in esri technology and trends. It’s a great opportunity to mingle with other data geeks, learn some new tips and tricks, and see what kinds of new and exciting projects our peers are working on. As always, the agenda was packed full of interesting sessions, educational opportunities, and user group meetings.



This year, I had the opportunity to present two moderated session papers on behalf of the team. Both presentations discussed the importance of looking at patients in the context of their home communities, but from two very different perspectives; public health research and individual practitioners.

Accelerating Data Value Across a National CHC Network introduced the new HealthLandscape Geocode API, which allows organizations to append community and social determinants data to patient-level data: giving them a unique way to enrich their investigations of patient-centered outcomes. Appending these types of data will allow for the exploration of clinical and disease-oriented service areas, hotspots, and coldspots. The Community Context of Health Center Patients focused on how we can use population-based big data and geospatial technologies to understand the social and environmental influences on the health of a physician’s patient panel through the idea of Community Vital Signs - as patient vital signs provide a biometric snapshot of an individual’s health status, community vital signs provide an environmental health perspective. Taken together, we can improve the care that patients are receiving. Both of these projects will be featured as detailed blog posts in the coming weeks.

In addition to our paper presentations, HealthLandscape was once again recognized as one of the top three GIS applications in the User Conference Applications Fair. The HealthLandscape Population Health Mapper builds upon the idea of “Place Matters,” a concept discussed in a recent blog. Users can select county-level metrics from seven categories identified by the CDC as recommended Health Outcomes and Health Determinants, using a slider bar to set thresholds and easily identify counties that perform poorly compared to the national average. We've highlighted this tool on the blog and will be hosting a “Population Health Mapper” webinar on Wednesday, August 19th. Click here to register, or contact us by email for more information.




I always enjoy the time that I spend at the Esri User Conference and I never fail to return home with new collaboration opportunities, new skills, and new ideas. I’m thrilled to take home another HealthLandscape award this year, too.



Jené Grandmont
Senior Manager, Application Development and Data Services
HealthLandscape