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. 2014 Apr 23;29(8):1183–1187. doi: 10.1007/s11606-014-2860-7

Table 1.

Directly Observed Care Employing USPs Completes a Three-Part Strategy of Performance Assessment

What is assessed How measured What it Does Limitations
Care processes as recorded in the chart Information extracted from medical record and claims data Rates evidence based indicators of quality Relies on accuracy and completeness of information in the medical record
Care processes as experienced by patients Patient ratings using surveys Captures how patients describe and rate their experiences receiving care Self-selection bias (dissatisfied patients don’t return) and limited frame of reference (most patients don’t have extensive comparative experience)
Care processes as directly observed Currently not measured.
Unannounced standardized patients
Rates how staff and clinicians conduct procedures, elicit and process information from patients, and attend to their needs Relatively small sample sizes, technical challenge of creating subterfuge, costs of USPs, opportunity cost of displacing a patient, coding costs