Quality Insights:
Clinical Quality in Primary Care
Healthcare quality measure: This measure shows how often doctors do not prescribe antibiotic medicine (such as penicillin) for children (3 months to 18 years old) who are diagnosed with colds, sore throats, or other upper respiratory infections. A high score means that your child’s doctor is using antibiotics correctly.
Reasons for this measure:
The common cold is the most frequent type of upper respiratory infection in children. Young children (3 months to 6 years old) may get up to eight colds each year. Older children (7 to 18 years old) may get as many as four colds each year.
Antibiotics do not cure colds, most sore throats, the flu, or other types of virus illness. In fact, antibiotics can cause harm if they are used when not needed. This is because germs can become resistant to antibiotics (when the medicine no longer helps). Studies show that antibiotics should only be used to treat bacterial infections, not viruses.
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Medical Group |
Comparison |
Rate |
Rating |
| Benchmarks: Nat'l Average 90th Percentile MA Rate |
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83.9% 93.2% 92.9% |
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Atrius Health, Inc., Harvard Vanguard Kenmore
Go to Group's Website
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98.6% |
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Four stars means the rate is above three benchmarks


Three stars means the rate is above two benchmarks


Two stars means the rate is above one benchmark


One star means the rate is not above benchmarks
MHQP has too little data to report on this measure. This can happen when the patients or illnesses a medical group cares for are not part of this report.Click here to view the MHQP Massachusetts Statewide Rates
and National benchmarks.
For more information on benchmarks, please see Questions & Answers.
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