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1.
Infect Control Hosp Epidemiol ; 45(3): 316-321, 2024 Mar.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-37877198

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: Patient safety organizations and researchers describe hospital-acquired pneumonia (HAP) as a largely preventable hospital-acquired infection that affects patient safety and quality of care. We provide evidence regarding the consequences of HAP among 2019 Medicare beneficiaries. DESIGN: Retrospective case-control study. PATIENTS: Calendar year 2019 Medicare beneficiaries with HAP during an initial hospitalization, defined by International Classification of Diseases, Tenth Revision, Clinical Modification (ICD-10-CM) coding on inpatient claims (n = 2,457). Beneficiaries with HAP were matched using diagnosis-related group (DRG) codes with beneficiaries who did not experience HAP (n = 2,457). METHODS: The 2019 calendar year Medicare 5% Standard Analytic Files (SAF), for inpatient, outpatient, physician, and all postacute hospital settings. The case group (HAP) and control group (non-HAP) were matched on disease severity, age, sex, and race and were compared for hospital length of stay, costs, and mortality during the initial hospitalization and across settings for 30, 60, and 90 days after discharge. The 2019 fiscal year MedPAR Claims data were used to determine Medicare costs. RESULTS: Medicare beneficiaries with HAP were 2.8 times more likely to die within 90 days compared with matched beneficiaries who did not develop HAP. Among those who survived, beneficiaries with HAP spent 6.6 more days in the hospital (69%) and cost the Medicare program an average of $14,487 (24%) more per episode of care across initial inpatient and postdischarge services. CONCLUSIONS: The findings of higher mortality and cost among Medicare beneficiaries who develop HAP suggest that HAP prevention should be prioritized as a patient safety and quality initiative for the Medicare program.


Subject(s)
Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia , Medicare , Humans , Aged , United States , Patient Discharge , Retrospective Studies , Health Expenditures , Case-Control Studies , Aftercare , Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia/epidemiology , Healthcare-Associated Pneumonia/prevention & control , Hospitals
2.
J Am Med Inform Assoc ; 24(6): 1142-1148, 2017 Nov 01.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29016973

ABSTRACT

OBJECTIVE: While most hospitals have adopted electronic health records (EHRs), we know little about whether hospitals use EHRs in advanced ways that are critical to improving outcomes, and whether hospitals with fewer resources - small, rural, safety-net - are keeping up. MATERIALS AND METHODS: Using 2008-2015 American Hospital Association Information Technology Supplement survey data, we measured "basic" and "comprehensive" EHR adoption among hospitals to provide the latest national numbers. We then used new supplement questions to assess advanced use of EHRs and EHR data for performance measurement and patient engagement functions. To assess a digital "advanced use" divide, we ran logistic regression models to identify hospital characteristics associated with high adoption in each advanced use domain. RESULTS: We found that 80.5% of hospitals adopted at least a basic EHR system, a 5.3 percentage point increase from 2014. Only 37.5% of hospitals adopted at least 8 (of 10) EHR data for performance measurement functions, and 41.7% of hospitals adopted at least 8 (of 10) patient engagement functions. Critical access hospitals were less likely to have adopted at least 8 performance measurement functions (odds ratio [OR] = 0.58; P < .001) and at least 8 patient engagement functions (OR = 0.68; P = 0.02). DISCUSSION: While the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act resulted in widespread hospital EHR adoption, use of advanced EHR functions lags and a digital divide appears to be emerging, with critical-access hospitals in particular lagging behind. This is concerning, because EHR-enabled performance measurement and patient engagement are key contributors to improving hospital performance. CONCLUSION: Hospital EHR adoption is widespread and many hospitals are using EHRs to support performance measurement and patient engagement. However, this is not happening across all hospitals.


Subject(s)
Diffusion of Innovation , Electronic Health Records/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals/statistics & numerical data , Electronic Health Records/trends , Meaningful Use/statistics & numerical data , United States
3.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 34(12): 2174-80, 2015 Dec.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-26561387

ABSTRACT

Achieving nationwide adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) remains an important policy priority. While EHR adoption has increased steadily since 2010, it is unclear how providers that have not yet adopted will fare now that federal incentives have converted to penalties. We used 2008-14 national data, which includes the most recently available, to examine hospital EHR trends. We found large gains in adoption, with 75 percent of US hospitals now having adopted at least a basic EHR system--up from 59 percent in 2013. However, small and rural hospitals continue to lag behind. Among hospitals without a basic EHR system, the function most often not yet adopted (in 61 percent of hospitals) was physician notes. We also saw large increases in the ability to meet core stage 2 meaningful-use criteria (40.5 percent of hospitals, up from 5.8 percent in 2013); much of this progress resulted from increased ability to meet criteria related to exchange of health information with patients and with other physicians during care transitions. Finally, hospitals most often reported up-front and ongoing costs, physician cooperation, and complexity of meeting meaningful-use criteria as challenges. Our findings suggest that nationwide hospital EHR adoption is in reach but will require attention to small and rural hospitals and strategies to address financial challenges, particularly now that penalties for lack of adoption have begun.


Subject(s)
Diffusion of Innovation , Electronic Health Records/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals , Databases, Factual , Meaningful Use/trends , United States
4.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 33(9): 1664-71, 2014 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-25104826

ABSTRACT

The national effort to promote the adoption and meaningful use of electronic health records (EHRs) is well under way. However, 2014 marks an important transition: For many hospitals, penalties will be assessed in fiscal year 2015 for failing to meet federal meaningful-use criteria by the end of fiscal year 2014. We used recent data from the American Hospital Association Annual Survey of Hospitals--IT Supplement to assess progress and challenges. EHR adoption among US hospitals continues to rise steeply: 59 percent now have at least a basic EHR. Small and rural hospitals continue to lag behind their better resourced counterparts. Most hospitals are able to meet many of the stage 2 meaningful-use criteria, but only 5.8 percent of hospitals are able to meet them all. Several criteria, including sharing care summaries with other providers and providing patients with online access to their data, will require attention from EHR vendors to ensure that the necessary functions are available and additional effort from many hospitals to make certain that these functionalities are used. Policy makers may want to consider new targeted strategies to ensure that all hospitals move toward meaningful use of EHRs.


Subject(s)
Electronic Health Records/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals , Meaningful Use , American Hospital Association , Diffusion of Innovation , Humans , Organizational Objectives , United States
5.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 32(8): 1355-60, 2013 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23918478

ABSTRACT

With nearly $30 billion in incentives available, it is critical to know to what extent US hospitals have been able to respond to those incentives by adopting electronic health record (EHR) systems that meet Medicare's criteria for their "meaningful use." Medicare has provided aggregate incentive payment data, but still missing is an understanding of how these payments are distributed across hospital types and years. Our analysis of Medicare data found a substantial increase in the percentage of hospitals receiving EHR incentive payments between 2011 (17.4 percent) and 2012 (36.8 percent). However, this increase was not uniform across all hospitals, and the overall proportion of hospitals receiving a payment for meaningful use was low. Critical-access, smaller, and publicly owned or nonprofit hospitals appeared to be at particular risk for failing to meet Medicare's meaningful-use criteria, and the overall proportion of hospitals receiving a payment for meaningful use was low. Starting in 2015, hospitals that fail to meet the criteria will be subject to financial penalties. To address the needs of institutions in danger of incurring these penalties, policy makers could implement targeted grant programs and provide additional information technology workforce support. In addition, the capacity of EHR system vendors should be carefully monitored to ensure that these institutions have access to the technology they need.


Subject(s)
Electronic Health Records/statistics & numerical data , Electronic Health Records/trends , Meaningful Use/statistics & numerical data , Meaningful Use/trends , Health Care Reform/statistics & numerical data , Health Care Reform/trends , Humans , United States , Utilization Review/statistics & numerical data
6.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 32(8): 1478-85, 2013 Aug.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-23840052

ABSTRACT

The US health care system is in the midst of an enormous change in the way health care providers and hospitals document, monitor, and share information about health and care delivery. Part of this transition involves a wholesale, but currently uneven, shift from paper-based records to electronic health record (EHR) systems. We used the most recent longitudinal survey of US hospitals to track how they are adopting and using EHR systems. Only 44 percent of hospitals report having and using what we define as at least a basic EHR system. And although 42.2 percent meet all of the federal stage 1 "meaningful-use" criteria, only 5.1 percent could meet the broader set of stage 2 criteria. Large urban hospitals continue to outpace rural and nonteaching hospitals in adopting EHR systems. The increase in adoption overall suggests that the positive and negative financial incentives currently in place across the US health care system are working as intended. However, achieving a nationwide health information technology infrastructure may require efforts targeted at smaller and rural hospitals.


Subject(s)
Electronic Health Records/statistics & numerical data , Electronic Health Records/trends , Hospital Information Systems/statistics & numerical data , Hospital Information Systems/trends , Hospital Records/statistics & numerical data , Forecasting , Hospitals, Rural/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, Urban/statistics & numerical data , Humans , Meaningful Use/statistics & numerical data , Meaningful Use/trends , Motivation , United States , Utilization Review/statistics & numerical data
7.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 31(5): 1092-9, 2012 May.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-22535503

ABSTRACT

To achieve the goal of comprehensive health information record keeping and exchange among providers and patients, hospitals must have functioning electronic health record systems that contain patient demographics, care histories, lab results, and more. Using national survey data on US hospitals from 2011, the year federal incentives for the meaningful use of electronic health records began, we found that the share of hospitals with any electronic health record system increased from 15.1 percent in 2010 to 26.6 percent in 2011, and the share with a comprehensive system rose from 3.6 percent to 8.7 percent. The proportion able to meet our proxy criteria for meaningful use also rose; in 2011, 18.4 percent of hospitals had these functions in place in at least one unit and 11.2 percent had them across all clinical units. However, gaps in rates of adoption of at least a basic record system have increased substantially over the past four years based on hospital size, teaching status, and location. Small, nonteaching, and rural hospitals continue to adopt electronic health record systems more slowly than other types of hospitals. In sum, this is mixed news for policy makers, who should redouble their efforts among hospitals that appear to be moving slowly and ensure that policies do not further widen gaps in adoption. A more robust infrastructure for information exchange needs to be developed, and possibly a special program for the sizable minority of hospitals that have almost no health information technology at all.


Subject(s)
Diffusion of Innovation , Electronic Health Records/statistics & numerical data , Hospitals, Rural , Health Care Surveys , Humans , United States
8.
J Oncol Pract ; 5(5): 262-263, 2009 Sep.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-29443627

ABSTRACT

The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 provides financial incentives for physicians and hospitals to adopt electronic health records. Practices can take initial steps outlined here to receive bonus payments and avoid penalties.

9.
Health Aff (Millwood) ; 22(6): 175-82, 2003.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-14649444

ABSTRACT

The Medicare program initiated prospective payment for inpatient hospital services in 1983. Although the payment system has achieved many of its goals, changes in the health care market and the public nature of the program will continue to present both challenges and opportunities for improvement. Looking forward, policymakers must consider how to balance paying accurately for services with using Medicare to achieve broader policy objectives. Paying for new technologies, responding to market segmentation and specialization, and encouraging quality improvement must also be addressed. To successfully navigate these issues, policymakers and program administrators need accurate and timely information.


Subject(s)
Medicare/organization & administration , Prospective Payment System/organization & administration , Aged , Biomedical Technology/economics , Continuity of Patient Care , Decision Support Systems, Management , Forecasting , Hospitals, Special/economics , Hospitals, Special/supply & distribution , Humans , Medicare/trends , Organizational Objectives , Prospective Payment System/trends , Quality of Health Care , United States
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