Division of Geriatric Medicine, University of Massachusetts Medical School, Biotech Four, 377 Plantation St, Ste 315, Worcester, MA 01605, USA.
Am J Manag Care. 2011 Sep;17(9):633-7.
While the 2011 implementation of "meaningful use" legislation for certified electronic health records (EHRs) promises to change quality reporting by overcoming data capture issues affecting quality measurement, the magnitude of this effect is unclear. We compared the measured quality of laboratory monitoring of Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS) medications based on specifications that (1) include and exclude patients hospitalized in the measurement year and (2) use physician test orders and patient test completion.
Cross-sectional study.
Among patients 18 years and older in a large multispecialty group practice utilizing a fully implemented EHR between January 1, 2008, and July 31, 2008, we measured the prevalence of ordering and completion of laboratory tests monitoring HEDIS medications (cardiovascular drugs [angiotensin-converting enzyme inhibitors or angiotensin receptor blockers, digoxin, and diuretics] and anticonvulsants [carbamazepine, phenobarbital, phenytoin, and valproic acid]).
Measures excluding hospitalized patients were not statistically significantly different from measures including hospitalized patients, except for digoxin, but this difference was not clinically significant. The prevalence of appropriate monitoring based on test orders typically captured in the EHR was statistically significantly higher than the prevalence based on claims-based test completions for cardiovascular drugs.
HEDIS quality metrics based on data typically collected from claims undermeasured quality of medication monitoring compared to EHR data. The HEDIS optional specification excluding hospitalized patients from the monitoring measure does not have a significant impact on reported quality. Integration of EHR data into quality measurement may significantly change some organizations' reported quality of care.
虽然 2011 年实施的针对经认证的电子健康记录(EHR)的“有意义使用”立法有望通过克服影响质量衡量的数据采集问题来改变质量报告,但这种效果的大小尚不清楚。我们比较了基于以下两种规格的医疗保健效果数据和信息集(HEDIS)药物实验室监测的测量质量:(1)包括和不包括在测量年度住院的患者,以及(2)使用医师测试订单和患者测试完成情况。
横断面研究。
在一家大型多专科实践中,在 2008 年 1 月 1 日至 2008 年 7 月 31 日期间使用完全实施的 EHR 的 18 岁及以上患者中,我们测量了监测 HEDIS 药物(心血管药物[血管紧张素转换酶抑制剂或血管紧张素受体阻滞剂、地高辛和利尿剂]和抗惊厥药[卡马西平、苯巴比妥、苯妥英和丙戊酸])的实验室测试订单和完成情况的流行率。
除地高辛外,排除住院患者的措施与包括住院患者的措施没有统计学上的显著差异,但这种差异没有临床意义。基于 EHR 中通常捕获的测试订单的适当监测的流行率明显高于基于基于索赔的测试完成情况的心血管药物的流行率。
与 EHR 数据相比,基于通常从索赔中收集的数据的 HEDIS 质量指标低估了药物监测的质量。HEDIS 可选规范将住院患者从监测措施中排除在外,不会对报告的质量产生重大影响。将 EHR 数据纳入质量衡量可能会显著改变一些组织报告的护理质量。