Key Findings
Physician Overtesting
62% of cardiac tests were found to be cost-ineffective, costing more than $150,000 per life-year saved.
Physician Undertesting
High-risk untested patients had significant adverse event rates above clinical thresholds, with 15.6% experiencing adverse events in the highest-risk group.
Experience Impact
More experienced physicians test less overall but match testing decisions better to patient risk levels.
Cost-Effectiveness of Testing by Risk Level
- Bottom quintile of risk: Tests cost $1,352,466 per life-year
- Top quintile of risk: Tests cost only $46,017 per life-year
- Clinical threshold for cost-effectiveness: $150,000 per life-year
Adverse Events in High-Risk Untested Patients
- Highest-risk bin: 15.6% adverse event rate
- Second-highest risk bin: 6.81% adverse event rate
- Clinical threshold for testing recommendation: 2%
Impact of Physician Experience
- Each year of experience reduces overall testing by 1.68 percentage points
- Reduces testing of lowest-risk patients by 0.04 percentage points
- Increases testing of highest-risk patients by 0.58 percentage points
Contribution and Implications
- Demonstrates how machine learning can identify both over- and under-testing patterns in healthcare
- Challenges the traditional "less is more" approach to healthcare policy
- Suggests need for more nuanced policies that consider both testing volume and patient risk levels
Data Sources
- Cost-effectiveness chart based on Table III data showing realized yield and cost-effectiveness by risk quintile
- Adverse events visualization derived from Figure II showing 30-day adverse event rates among untested patients
- Experience impact chart constructed from Table VI data showing effects of physician experience on testing patterns