Federal Register: July 22, 2009 (Volume 74, Number 139)
DOCID: fr22jy09-87 FR Doc E9-17201
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality
NOTICE: NOTICES
DOCID: fr22jy09-87
DOCUMENT ACTION: Notice.
SUBJECT CATEGORY:
Agency Information Collection Activities: Proposed Collection; Comment Request
DATES: Comments on this notice must be received by August 21, 2009.
DOCUMENT SUMMARY:
This notice announces the intention of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) to request that the Office of Management and Budget (OMB) approve the proposed information collection project: ``Health Literacy Item Set Supplemental to CAHPS Hospital SurveyPretest of Proposed Questions and Methodology.'' In accordance with the Paperwork Reduction Act of 1995, Public Law 10413 (44 U.S.C. 3506(c)(2)(A)), AHRQ invites the public to comment on this proposed information collection.
This proposed information collection was previously published in the Federal Register on May 13th, 2009 and allowed 60 days for public comment. The purpose of this notice is to allow an additional 30 days for public comment. This notice differs from the 60 day notice in the following ways: (1) The burden hours are increased from 200 to 250, and (2) an incentive experiment has been added.
SUMMARY:
Agency Information Collection Activities; Proposals, Submissions, and Approvals
SUPPLEMENTAL INFORMATION
Proposed Project
``Health Literacy Item Set Supplemental to CAHPS Hospital Survey Pretest of Proposed Questions and Methodology''
AHRQ proposes to conduct a pretest of the Consumer Assessment of Healthcare Providers and Systems (CAHPS[reg]) Hospital Survey health literacy module. The CAHPS program is a multiyear initiative of the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality. AHRQ first launched the program in October 1995 in response to concerns about the lack of good information about the quality of health plans from the enrollees' perspective. Numerous public and private organizations collected information on enrollee and patient satisfaction, but the surveys varied from sponsor to sponsor and often changed from year to year. The CAHPS[reg] program was designed to make it possible to compare survey results across sponsors and over time, and to generate tools and resources that sponsors can use to produce understandable and usable comparative information for consumers.
Over time, the program has expanded beyond its original focus on health plans to address a range of health care services to meet the various needs of health care consumers, purchasers, health plans, providers, and policymakers. Based on a literature review and an assessment of currently available questionnaires, AHRQ identified the need to develop a health literacy module for the CAHPS[reg] Hospital Survey. The intent of the planned module is to examine patients' perspectives on how well health information is communicated to them by healthcare professionals in the hospital setting. The objective of the new module is to provide information to health plans, hospitals, clinicians, group practices, and other interested parties regarding the quality of health information delivered to patients. The set of questions about health literacy will be evaluated as a supplement to the CAHPS[reg] Hospital Survey.
This study will be conducted for AHRQ by its contractor, RAND Corporation. It is being conducted pursuant to AHRQ's statutory authority to conduct research and evaluations on health care and systems for the delivery of such care, including activities with respect to (1) the quality, effectiveness, efficiency, appropriateness and value of health care services. See 42 U.S.C. 299a(a)(1).
This study is a onetime field test to be completed in the calendar years 2009 and 2010. The field test to be conducted under this request will be done for the following purposes:
a. Analysis of item wordingAssess candidate wordings for items.
b. Analysis of participation rateEvaluate the overall response rate and the proportion of that obtained from mail versus telephone modes of data collection.
c. Case mix adjustment analysisEvaluate variables that need to be considered for case mix adjustment of scores.
d. Psychometric analysisProvide information for the revision of the health literacy item set based on the assessment of the reliability and validity.
e. Incentive experimentProvide information on the effectiveness of a postpaid, $5 incentive as a mechanism to enhance response by randomizing half the sample at one site to an experiment in which a postpaid incentive of $5 is provided for completing the survey.
The end result will be collection of the data related to the assessment of patients' perspective on how well health information is communicated to them by health care professionals in a hospital setting. The field testing will ensure that future data collections yield high quality data and minimize respondent burden, increase agency efficiency, and improve responsiveness to the public. The survey items will be added to currently available CAHPS[reg] surveys and will enhance the ability of hospitals to assess the quality of their services.
Method of Collection
The potential respondent universe is persons who had at least one overnight stay at a hospital within the previous five months. Excluded from the study will be those who were less than 18 years old at the time of their admission, had a psychiatric diagnosis, were discharged to a hospice facility or died during the hospitalization. Testing sites will be selected purposively based on several considerations, including ability to execute the activities necessary to participate in the pilot, number of beds, number of discharges for medical, surgical, and obstetric patients, average length of stay, location (urban versus rural), profit status, and academic medical center status.
The draw will be a sample large enough to yield approximately 600 completes. It is assumed that
[[Page 36236]]
approximately 1,200 patients will be sampled across all field sites
with a response rate of 50%. This pretest will use a mixed mail
telephone mode of data collection which will include the following steps:
Every effort will be made to maximize the response rate, while retaining the voluntary nature of the effort. An advance notice will be mailed prior to mailing the survey and will include a letter explaining what the survey is about, who is doing it and why, and providing contact information for questions. The second mailing and telephone followup are expected to result in significant increases in response. Every effort to maximize the response rate among Spanishspeaking respondents will be made. A Spanish version of the advance notice, the questionnaire, cover letters, and the reminder card, as well as a Spanish version of the telephone transcript has been developed. The cover letters in English include a note in Spanish instructing respondents to call a toll free number if they would like to receive a copy of the survey in Spanish. In addition, participating field sites will ask for information on language preference and/or race/ethnicity of sample patients so that the mailing of the survey can be tailored for Spanishspeakers.
Finally, phone followup to respondents who do not complete the survey by mail will be conducted by bilingual interviewers so that those who want to complete the survey by telephone in either English or Spanish can accommodated.
Surveys generally do not yield complete responses from every individual sampled from the population. In this analysis, patterns of both unit and item nonresponse will be examined and modeled, and the potential impact of nonresponse bias assessed. A common set of administrative variables (e.g., age, gender, race/ethnicity) will be used to predict unit nonresponse. These variables and others collected on the survey itself will be used as predictors of item nonresponse. Case mix adjustment and nonresponse weights will be used to more accurately reflect consumer experiences with health care in the field test hospitals. Multivariate logistic regression models will be used to analyze the factors associated with unit nonresponse and item nonresponse.
Estimated Annual Respondent Burden
Exhibit 1 shows the estimated annualized burden for the respondents' time to participate in this data collection. The CAHPS Hospital Survey Health Literacy Module will be completed by about 600 persons. The estimated response time of 25 minutes is based on the written length of the survey and AHRQ's experience with previous CAHPS[reg] surveys of comparable length that were fielded with similar samples. The total burden hours are estimated to be 250 hours.
Exhibit 2 shows the respondents' cost burden associated with their
time to participate in this data collection. The total cost burden of completing pretest is estimated to be $4,890.
Exhibit 1Estimated Annualized Burden Hours
Number of
Form name Number of responses per Hours per Total burden
respondents respondent response hours
Mail survey with reminder card, mail and phone 600 1 25/60 250 followup......................................
Total....................................... 600 1 na 250 Exhibit 2Estimated Annualized Burden Hours Number of Total burden Average hourly Total cost Form name respondents hours wage rate* burden Mail survey with reminder card, mail and phone 600 250 $19.56 $4,890 followup......................................
Total....................................... 600 250 na 4,890 *Based upon the average wages, ``National Compensation Survey: Occupational Wages in the United States, May 2007,'' U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of Labor Statistics. Estimated Annual Costs to the Federal Government
The total cost for the contracted service is approximately $245,000
and the cost for AHRQ staff to oversee the project is $50,000,
including benefits. The project was initiated in October of 2008 and it
is forecasted that it will be completed in 18 months. The initial
developmental work has been completed within the first ten months of
the project and it is forecasted that the pretest, analysis and
finalization of the Health Literacy Item Set supplemental to CAHPS
Hospital Survey can be completed within the next eight months. It is
estimated that the total cost of the project is approximately $295,000.
The annualized cost of the project is approximately $196,669. Exhibit 3Estimated Cost
Annualized
Cost component Total cost cost
Review of literature.................... $20,000 $13,334
Cognitive interviews.................... 60,000 40,000
Field test.............................. 90,000 60,000 [[Page 36237]]
Data analyses........................... 40,000 26,667
Finalize survey......................... 35,000 23,334
AHRQ project management................. 50,000 33,334
Total............................... 295,000 196,669 Request for Comments
In accordance with the abovecited Paperwork Reduction Act legislation, comments on AFIRQ's information collection are requested with regard to any of the following: (a) Whether the proposed collection of information is necessary for the proper performance of AHRQ health care research and health care information dissemination functions, including whether the information will have practical utility; (b) the accuracy of AHRQ's estimate of burden (including hours and costs) of the proposed collection(s) of information; (c) ways to enhance the quality, utility, and clarity of the information to be collected; and (d) ways to minimize the burden of the collection of information upon the respondents, including the use of automated collection techniques or other forms of information technology.
Comments submitted in response to this notice will be summarized
and included in the Agency's subsequent request for OMB approval of the
proposed information collection. All comments will become a matter of public record.
Dated: July 8, 2009.
Carolyn M. Clancy,
Director.
[FR Doc. E917201 Filed 72109; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 416090M
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT
Doris Lefkowitz, AHRQ Reports Clearance Officer, (301) 4271477, or by email at
doris.lefkowitz@ahrq.hhs.gov.