Welcome NAMCS Participants! "Data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey are essential to understanding the patterns of health care in America. We need this information to design the best health care programs and to develop the most effective health policies. We appreciate the valuable time that health professionals share with us in providing their information." -- Mike Leavitt, Secretary of Health and Human Services "The best scientific information is the cornerstone of our efforts to improve health and prevent disease. We depend on the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey for current and comprehensive health data. I urge you to participate in this important study. We value your cooperation." -- Julie L. Gerberding, M.D., M.P.H., Director, Centers for Disease Control and Prevention Continuing Medical Education for Health Care Providers The course entitled "National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey Methods: What Clinicians Need to Know" is now eligible for 1.25 hours of Category 1 continuing medical education (CME), 1.4 hours of continuing nursing education (CNE) and 0.1 continuing education (CEU) credits. Please click here for more information.
What
is the NAMCS?
Watch
an Audio-Visual Presentation on the NAMCS The National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NAMCS) is the Nation’s foremost study of ambulatory care in physicians’ offices and has been conducted since 1973. Each year 3,000 physicians are randomly selected to provide data on approximately 30 patient visits over a 1-week period. These data are widely used by health care researchers, medical schools, policy analysts, congressional staff, the news media, and many others to improve our knowledge of medical practice patterns. Reliable NAMCS data depend on complete reports from all sampled physicians. Data from all sample cases are needed to ensure that policy decisions are based on the most accurate data possible. Your participation is important.
Who
is eligible to participate? Why
participate?
What
are the benefits of participating? If you would like more information on participation, please contact David Woodwell at dwoodwell@cdc.gov or (800)392-2862 or visit our Ambulatory Health Care Data home page.
Cervical Cancer Screening Supplement Background Genital human papillomavirus (HPV) infection is common among sexually active populations. There is considerable new information about HPV infection, transmission, and methods of prevention. In addition, a new DNA test to detect HPV as well as newly approved indications for HPV testing have important implications for clinicians in both their cervical cancer screening practices and their management of positive HPV diagnoses among female patients and their sex partners. There is recognition that this new information may require different approaches to cervical cancer screening in primary care practice, as well as new information that needs to be conveyed when counseling and educating patients and their sex partners.
How to Participate If you believe you are eligible and would like to participate, please contact your Census Representative who will be glad to assist you and answer any questions you may have. Thank you for being part of this important research study!
Community Health Centers What
are Community Health Centers? Why
include CHCs in the NAMCS? Visits made to CHCs, although in-scope for the NAMCS, have been underrepresented in the survey because the normal sample of physicians is simply not large enough to capture many of the physicians who work at these important locations. How
does the NAMCS sample CHCs? Three providers at each of the 104 CHCs in the sample will be asked to participate. The resulting visits that are sampled from the 312 providers will enable NCHS to provide separate statistics on the visits made to CHCs. Additionally, mid-level providers--nurse practitioners, physicians assistants, and nurse midwives--who work in CHCs are eligible to participate in the NAMCS.
Note
on Oncologists
Confidentiality of
NAMCS data HIPAA
Privacy Rule and NAMCS The final Privacy Rule has been published as required by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA). Health care providers who transmit financial and administrative health information electronically must comply with the Rule as of April 14, 2003. The Privacy Rule permits you to make disclosures of protected health information without patient authorization for public health purposes or for research that has been approved by an Institutional Review Board (IRB). This survey meets both of these criteria. Additionally, disclosures may be made under a data use agreement with NCHS. If you have questions about your rights as a respondent, you may call the IRB at 1-800-223-8118. The IRB is an independent board that protects the interests of people who take part in studies. Click here to see the IRB approval letter for NAMCS. We have included all the information you need to be assured that you are allowed to disclose protected health information for the NAMCS in our introductory letter to physicians, CHC directors, and CHC providers, and also here at our website. However, there are several things that you must do to assure compliance with the Rule when participating in the survey. First, the privacy notice that you generally provide to your patients must indicate that patient information may be disclosed for either research or public health purposes. And secondly, you may need to keep a record of the disclosure (which we will provide) that shows that some data from the patient’s medical record were disclosed to CDC for the NAMCS. Of course, if you do not transmit health information electronically (such as claims data), then you are not subject to the Privacy Rule or the requirements described above. The Privacy Rule applies to data collected for the NAMCS because we are asking you to provide certain information about patients without their authorization. For public health and research purposes, the NAMCS collects information from the patient's medical record such as visit date, birth date, and residential ZIP code. While not directly identifiable, these data are considered protected health information as defined by the Privacy Rule. As described above, the Rule allows you to disclose this information for public health and research purposes.Please be assured that we fully intend to continue our long history of gaining the voluntary participation of providers like you by upholding the highest confidentiality standards and practices. For additional information on the confidentiality of NAMCS data, please go to NCHS’s Privacy Protection page and Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ’s) about the NAMCS. Your
assurance of privacy The NAMCS does not collect any personally identifiable data about patients such as patient's name or address. The top section of the NAMCS Patient Record form, the survey instrument, contains a detachable section where hospital staff can record the patient's name for reference purposes. This section is detached prior to submission of the forms, and is kept by hospital staff for several weeks, in case it is necessary to retrieve missing information or clarify recorded information. Other information that may permit identification of an individual, a practice, or an establishment will be held confidential, will be used only by persons engaged in and for the purpose of the survey, and will not be disclosed or released to other persons or used for any other purpose without consent of the individual or the establishment in accordance with section 308(d) of the Public Health Service Act (42 USC 242m). To see a copy of the NAMCS Patient Record form, click here.
How are NAMCS data
used? NAMCS data in the news About one in four doctors use some form of electronic medical records, suggesting that a technology frequently billed as a way to improve the quality and efficiency of care has yet to win widespread acceptance, according to a study released yesterday. -- Washington Post, October 12, 2006. The primary driver of electronic health record (EHR) adoption was practice size, with a clear linear relationship between practice size and EHR use. -- Electronic Health Record, October 2006. In the United States, medical visits rose 31 percent from 1994 to 2004. Americans are seeking medical care in greater numbers than ever before, with the number of visits growing at nearly three times the rate of population growth, according to government statistics published yesterday. -- Washington Post, June 2006. This is truly a national resource. Without it, we would not have any reliable estimates of what happens at all the visits that Americans have with their doctors. -- Jim Rodgers, American Medical Association Vice president for Health Policy. NAMCS is endorsed by many professional organizations. Here is a list of organizational endorsements: American Academy of Ambulatory Care Nursing American Academy of Dermatology American Academy of Family Physicians American Academy of Ophthalmology American Academy of Orthopedic Surgeons American Academy of Otolaryngology – Head and Neck Surgery, Inc American Academy of Pediatrics American Academy of Physical Medicine and Rehabilitation American College of Cardiology American College of Obstetricians and Gynecologists American College of Physicians American College of Preventive Medicine American Osteopathic Association American Psychiatric Association American Society of Clinical Oncology American Society of Plastic Surgeons American Urological Association Association of American Medical Colleges National Association of Community Health Centers If you have any further questions or comments related to participation, please contact David Woodwell at:
National Center for Health Statistics
This page last reviewed
August 20, 2008
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