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San Jose Health IT Summit
2017-04-13 - 2017-04-14    
All Day
About Health IT Summits U.S. healthcare is at an inflection point right now, as policy mandates and internal healthcare system reform begin to take hold, [...]
Annual IHI Summit
2017-04-20 - 2017-04-22    
All Day
The Office Practice & Community Improvement Conference ​​​​​​The 18th Annual Summit on Improving Patient Care in the Office Practice and the Community taking place April 20–22, 2017, in Orlando, FL, brings together 1,000 health improvers from around the globe, in [...]
Stanford Medicine X | ED
2017-04-22 - 2017-04-23    
All Day
Stanford Medicine X | ED is a conference on the future of medical education at the intersections of people, technology and design. As an Everyone [...]
2017 Health Datapalooza
2017-04-27 - 2017-04-28    
All Day
Health Datapalooza brings together a diverse audience of over 1,600 people from the public and private sectors to learn how health and health care can [...]
The 14th Annual World Health Care Congress
2017-04-30 - 2017-05-03    
All Day
The 14th Annual World Health Care Congress April 30 - May 3, 2017 • Washington, DC • The Marriott Wardman Park Hotel Connecting and Preparing [...]
Events on 2017-04-13
San Jose Health IT Summit
13 Apr 17
San Jose
Events on 2017-04-20
Annual IHI Summit
20 Apr 17
Orlando
Events on 2017-04-22
Events on 2017-04-27
2017 Health Datapalooza
27 Apr 17
Washington, D.C
Events on 2017-04-30
Articles

EHR Use Reduces Short-Term Ambulatory Care Costs-Study Finds

ambulatory care

The use of electronic health records helped reduce short-term ambulatory health care costs but did not reduce overall inpatient costs, according to a study published Tuesday in the Annals of Internal Medicine, MedPage Today reports.

Study Details

For the study, researchers examined health care providers participating in the Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative, an initiative that aims to help communities widely adopt ambulatory EHRs (Pittman, MedPage Today, 7/15).

The researchers compared health insurance data claims from January 2005 through June 2009 for patient care in three Massachusetts communities that adopted EHRs with six communities that did not (Tran, “Capsules,” Kaiser Health News, 7/15).

There were a total of 48,000 patients in the communities that adopted EHRs and 130,000 in the control-group communities.

Researchers calculated the monthly costs of commercial payers from 15 months before EHR implementation and 18 months after implementation.

Study Findings

The study found that providers with EHRs saved an average of $5.14 per member each month over the 18 months following implementation, for a total of 3.4% in overall savings. Ambulatory costs accounted for about $4.69 of that amount.

The researchers found that health care costs increased for both the EHR and control groups. The EHR groups’ spending increased by an average of .78 absolute percentage points and the control groups’ spending increased by 1.09 absolute percentage points (MedPage Today, 7/15).

The study determined that there were significant savings in outpatient radiology costs. However, it found no significant savings in:

  • Inpatient care costs;
  • Outpatient pharmacy care costs;
  • Laboratory care costs; or
  • Total cost of care (“Capsules,” Kaiser Health News, 7/15).

Comments

The researchers determined that the “study offers robust evidence on the likely short-term effect of the federal policy effort to promote meaningful use of EHRs” (Durben Hirsch, FierceEMR, 7/16).

Lead author Julia Adler-Milstein of the University of Michigan and fellow study authors wrote that the “failure to find a statistically significant reduction in total cost may be explained by providers not using EHRs in more advanced ways that would improve patient health status, thereby avoiding hospitalizations and other high-cost episodes” (MedPage Today, 7/15). Source