Literature DB >> 21471489

Measuring health care performance now, not tomorrow: essential steps to support effective health reform.

Joachim Roski1, Mark McClellan.   

Abstract

Better data on the quality of health care being delivered in the United States are urgently needed if efforts to reform the nation's health care system are to succeed. This paper describes a "distributed data approach" to computing performance results while protecting patients' privacy. The strategy builds on the efforts of the Quality Alliance Steering Committee, a multistakeholder coalition focused on the implementation of performance measures. Instead of waiting for the government or the private sector to build large data warehouses, existing data from administrative sources, laboratories, clinical registries, and electronic health records could be put to greater use now, resulting in improved patient care and spurring further advances in performance measurement. In this article we introduce an overall framework for achieving these goals, and we describe a set of steps to accelerate and expand the availability of performance measures to improve care now.

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Year:  2011        PMID: 21471489     DOI: 10.1377/hlthaff.2011.0137

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Health Aff (Millwood)        ISSN: 0278-2715            Impact factor:   6.301


  8 in total

1.  Prioritizing public- private partnership models for public hospitals of iran based on performance indicators.

Authors:  Raana Gholamzadeh Nikjoo; Hossein Jabbari Beyrami; Ali Jannati; Mohammad Asghari Jaafarabadi
Journal:  Health Promot Perspect       Date:  2012-12-28

2.  The Virtuous Circles of Clinical Information Systems: a Modern Utopia.

Authors:  P Degoulet
Journal:  Yearb Med Inform       Date:  2016-11-10

3.  Improving Performance on Preventive Health Quality Measures Using Clinical Decision Support to Capture Care Done Elsewhere and Patient Exceptions.

Authors:  Michael E Bowen; Deepa Bhat; Jason Fish; Brett Moran; Temple Howell-Stampley; Lynne Kirk; Stephen D Persell; Ethan A Halm
Journal:  Am J Med Qual       Date:  2017-10-14       Impact factor: 1.852

4.  Establishing the feasibility of measuring performance in use of addiction pharmacotherapy.

Authors:  Cindy Parks Thomas; Deborah W Garnick; Constance M Horgan; Kay Miller; Alex H S Harris; Melissa M Rosen
Journal:  J Subst Abuse Treat       Date:  2013-03-13

5.  Validity of electronic health record-derived quality measurement for performance monitoring.

Authors:  Amanda Parsons; Colleen McCullough; Jason Wang; Sarah Shih
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2012-01-16       Impact factor: 4.497

6.  Population health measurement: applying performance measurement concepts in population health settings.

Authors:  Michael A Stoto
Journal:  EGEMS (Wash DC)       Date:  2015-03-26

7.  e-Measures: insight into the challenges and opportunities of automating publicly reported quality measures.

Authors:  Terhilda Garrido; Sudheen Kumar; John Lekas; Mark Lindberg; Dhanyaja Kadiyala; Alan Whippy; Barbara Crawford; Jed Weissberg
Journal:  J Am Med Inform Assoc       Date:  2013-07-05       Impact factor: 4.497

8.  The Perioperative Surgical Home: how can it make the case so everyone wins?

Authors:  Thomas R Vetter; Lee A Goeddel; Arthur M Boudreaux; Thomas R Hunt; Keith A Jones; Jean-Francois Pittet
Journal:  BMC Anesthesiol       Date:  2013-03-14       Impact factor: 2.217

  8 in total

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