R01LM014233
Project Grant
Overview
Grant Description
Geographic variations in health care: Overcoming bias, expanding generalizability, and improving relevance - Project summary
A substantial amount of research over the past 50 years involving Medicare and other health insurance claims data has focused on evaluating variation in health care use and outcomes across geographic regions.
For example, over the last quarter-century, the Dartmouth Atlas Project has focused on variation in Medicare fee-for-service health care use for diagnostically defined cohorts of patients, often conditioning on future outcomes (e.g., death) to account for variation in health status.
Numerous other claims studies have also used Medicare claims data to estimate comparative effectiveness of different treatments and procedures.
Almost all of these types of research studies have used a nationwide measure of health care markets created at Dartmouth known as “Hospital Referral Regions (HRRs).”
These regional markets, and the methodology underlying their delineation, have remained largely unchanged for nearly 30 years.
In addition, because Medicare primarily covers people aged 65 and over, these regional measures—even at the time—are not representative of the whole population, leading to questions regarding the external validity of the published results especially given the tendency to equate such findings with the whole population.
Motivated by the recent surge of interest in health and health care inequities, a growing concern in algorithmic bias, availability of newer and more extensive data on younger populations, and advances in network and geospatial analysis, this project proposes to revisit the methodology, definitions, and practical applications of regional and network measures of health care use and outcomes.
These new approaches will avoid the potential biases of prior geographic measures by better capturing care patterns of underserved populations, and will facilitate geographic variations and comparative-effectiveness research that overcomes bias and possesses greater statistical power to detect effects of interest.
Secondly, this project will develop new measures that quantify heterogeneity of geographic and other variations in use and spending across population strata, including disparity indices.
Thirdly, this project will evaluate the bias of Medicare estimates and develop procedures to generalize results to other populations.
Results of all analyses, including the algorithms for HRR delineation, will be used to modernize statistical and geographic approaches to characterizing health care access and health outcomes.
These will be widely disseminated to research and stakeholder communities, thus empowering public health professionals and researchers to define analysis and administrative units pertaining to their specific health care systems and needs.
This project will have a major impact on the research communities engaged in the evaluation of geographic variation in health care delivery and health outcomes.
A substantial amount of research over the past 50 years involving Medicare and other health insurance claims data has focused on evaluating variation in health care use and outcomes across geographic regions.
For example, over the last quarter-century, the Dartmouth Atlas Project has focused on variation in Medicare fee-for-service health care use for diagnostically defined cohorts of patients, often conditioning on future outcomes (e.g., death) to account for variation in health status.
Numerous other claims studies have also used Medicare claims data to estimate comparative effectiveness of different treatments and procedures.
Almost all of these types of research studies have used a nationwide measure of health care markets created at Dartmouth known as “Hospital Referral Regions (HRRs).”
These regional markets, and the methodology underlying their delineation, have remained largely unchanged for nearly 30 years.
In addition, because Medicare primarily covers people aged 65 and over, these regional measures—even at the time—are not representative of the whole population, leading to questions regarding the external validity of the published results especially given the tendency to equate such findings with the whole population.
Motivated by the recent surge of interest in health and health care inequities, a growing concern in algorithmic bias, availability of newer and more extensive data on younger populations, and advances in network and geospatial analysis, this project proposes to revisit the methodology, definitions, and practical applications of regional and network measures of health care use and outcomes.
These new approaches will avoid the potential biases of prior geographic measures by better capturing care patterns of underserved populations, and will facilitate geographic variations and comparative-effectiveness research that overcomes bias and possesses greater statistical power to detect effects of interest.
Secondly, this project will develop new measures that quantify heterogeneity of geographic and other variations in use and spending across population strata, including disparity indices.
Thirdly, this project will evaluate the bias of Medicare estimates and develop procedures to generalize results to other populations.
Results of all analyses, including the algorithms for HRR delineation, will be used to modernize statistical and geographic approaches to characterizing health care access and health outcomes.
These will be widely disseminated to research and stakeholder communities, thus empowering public health professionals and researchers to define analysis and administrative units pertaining to their specific health care systems and needs.
This project will have a major impact on the research communities engaged in the evaluation of geographic variation in health care delivery and health outcomes.
Awardee
Funding Goals
NOT APPLICABLE
Grant Program (CFDA)
Awarding / Funding Agency
Place of Performance
Hanover,
New Hampshire
037551421
United States
Geographic Scope
Single Zip Code
Related Opportunity
Analysis Notes
Amendment Since initial award the total obligations have increased 190% from $387,426 to $1,125,279.
Trustees Of Dartmouth College was awarded
Project Grant R01LM014233
worth $1,125,279
from the National Library of Medicine in August 2024 with work to be completed primarily in Hanover New Hampshire United States.
The grant
has a duration of 3 years 9 months and
was awarded through assistance program 93.879 Medical Library Assistance.
The Project Grant was awarded through grant opportunity NLM Research Grants in Biomedical Informatics and Data Science (R01 Clinical Trial Optional).
Status
(Ongoing)
Last Modified 5/21/26
Period of Performance
8/1/24
Start Date
5/31/28
End Date
Funding Split
$1.1M
Federal Obligation
$0.0
Non-Federal Obligation
$1.1M
Total Obligated
Activity Timeline
Subgrant Awards
Disclosed subgrants for R01LM014233
Transaction History
Modifications to R01LM014233
Additional Detail
Award ID FAIN
R01LM014233
SAI Number
R01LM014233-895640093
Award ID URI
SAI UNAVAILABLE
Awardee Classifications
Private Institution Of Higher Education
Awarding Office
75NL00 NIH National Library of Medicine
Funding Office
75NL00 NIH National Library of Medicine
Awardee UEI
EB8ASJBCFER9
Awardee CAGE
4B580
Performance District
NH-02
Senators
Jeanne Shaheen
Margaret Hassan
Margaret Hassan
Modified: 5/21/26