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. 2012 Oct;19(5):257-64.
doi: 10.3109/09286586.2012.698692.

Cataract surgery among Medicare beneficiaries

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Cataract surgery among Medicare beneficiaries

Oliver D Schein et al. Ophthalmic Epidemiol. 2012 Oct.

Abstract

Purpose: To present descriptive epidemiology of cataract surgery among Medicare recipients in the United States.

Setting: Cataract surgery performed on Medicare beneficiaries in 2003 and 2004.

Methods: Medicare claims data were used to identify all cataract surgery claims for procedures performed in the United States in 2003-2004. Standard assumptions were used to limit the claims to actual cataract surgery procedures performed. Summary statistics were created to determine the number of procedures performed for each outcome of interest: cataract surgery rates by age, sex, race and state; surgical volume by facility type and surgeon characteristics; time interval between first- and second-eye cataract surgery.

Results: The national cataract surgery rate for 2003-2004 was 61.8 per 1000 Medicare beneficiary person-years. The rate was significantly higher for females and for those aged 75-84 years. After adjustment for age and sex, blacks had approximately a 30% lower rate of surgery than whites. While only 5% of cataract surgeons performed more than 500 cataract surgeries annually, these surgeons performed 26% of the total cataract surgeries. Increasing surgical volume was found to be highly correlated with use of ambulatory surgical centers and reduced time interval between first- and second-eye surgery in the same patient.

Conclusions: The epidemiology of cataract surgery in the United States Medicare population documents substantial variation in surgical rates by race, sex, age, and by certain provider characteristics.

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Conflict of interest statement

Financial Conflicts of Interest: None

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References

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