Volume 48 | Number 2pt1 | April 2013

Abstract List

Ajit Appari Ph.D., M. Eric Johnson Ph.D., Denise L. Anthony Ph.D.


Objective

To estimate the incremental effects of transitions in electronic health record () system capabilities on hospital process quality.


Data Source

Hospital Compare (process quality), ealth nformation and anagement ystems ociety nalytics ( use), and npatient rospective ayment ystem (hospital characteristics) for 2006–2010.


Study Setting

Hospital systems were categorized into five levels (Level_0 to Level_4) based on use of eight clinical applications. Level_3 systems can meet 2011 “meaningful use” objectives. Process quality was measured as composite scores on a 100‐point scale for heart attack, heart failure, pneumonia, and surgical care infection prevention. Statistical analyses were conducted using fixed effects linear panel regression model for all hospitals, hospitals stratified on condition‐specific baseline quality, and for large hospitals.


Principal Findings

Among all hospitals, implementing Level_3 systems yielded an incremental 0.35–0.49 percentage point increase in quality (over Level_2) across three conditions. Hospitals in bottom quartile of baseline quality increased 1.16–1.61 percentage points across three conditions for reaching Level_3. However, transitioning to Level_4 yielded an incremental decrease of 0.90–1.0 points for three conditions among all hospitals and 0.65–1.78 for bottom quartile hospitals.


Conclusions

Hospitals transitioning to systems capable of meeting 2011 meaningful use objectives improved process quality, and lower quality hospitals experienced even higher gains. However, hospitals that transitioned to more advanced systems saw quality declines.