Carolyn Clancy, M.D., Director
Agency for Healthcare Research and
Quality (AHRQ)
Testimony on Health Information Technology before the House Subcommittee on Management, Organization, and Procurement
November 1, 2007
Mr. Chairman and Members of the
Subcommittee, I am Dr. Carolyn Clancy, the Director of the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality, known as AHRQ, a component of the Department
of Health and Human Services. I would like to thank you for the opportunity to
discuss the role that health information technology (Health IT) can play in
improving the quality of health care for underserved populations in this Nation.
The mission of the Agency for
Healthcare Research and Quality is to improve the quality, safety,
effectiveness, and efficiency of health care for all Americans. As part of
this mission, AHRQ has worked for many years to harness the power of health IT
to improve how health care is delivered, and ultimately, the health of the
American people. To that end, we work closely with the Office of the National
Coordinator of Health IT and other Federal agencies to assure that our
investments are closely aligned and concentrate specifically on the use of health
IT to improve safety and quality in diverse health care settings, with a strong
focus on those organizations providing care to underserved and rural
populations.
Inequities in Care
It is an understatement to say that health
care quality in the United States is nowhere near as good as it could or should
be. We also have wide racial, socioeconomic, and geographic inequities in how
health care is delivered in this country.
According to research from RAND, partially funded by AHRQ, Americans have just a 50-percent chance of receiving the
care they need when they go to a doctor's office. Other research indicates
that as many as 1.5 million medication errors occur in hospitals each year; serious
problems with health care quality exist in all areas in health care.
According to data from AHRQ's annual,
congressionally mandated National Health Care Quality Report, health
care quality improved just 3.1 percent in 2006—the same rate of improvement
as the previous 2 years. Data for these measures come from a variety of
databases, including Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) data,
vital statistics, the National Health Interview Survey (NHIS), and the Medical
Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS).
Its companion report, the National
Health Care Disparities Report, found that access to high-quality care
varied widely between racial, ethnic, and economic groups. This report focuses
on a number of health care processes and outcomes that are useful for tracking
quality of care. Of the 22 core measures that support comparisons across
racial and ethnic groups, African Americans received poorer quality care than
whites for 73 percent of the core measures included in the disparities report.
Hispanics received poorer quality of care than non-Hispanic whites for 77
percent of the measures. Poor people received lower quality of care than
high-income people for 71 percent of the measures.
The Disparities Report also documents
the quality of care for residents of rural America. We know that compared with
their national counterparts, rural residents are more likely to be elderly,
poor, in fair or poor health, and to have chronic conditions. Rural residents
are less likely to receive recommended preventive services and report, on
average, fewer visits to health care providers. Unfortunately, we do not have
data specific to urban, underserved Americans.
Improving Health Care for All
Americans
The good news is that we are working
to resolve these quality problems and we are making progress.
According to AHRQ's quality and
disparities reports, the greatest quality gains occurred in U.S. hospitals, where quality improved 7.8 percent. Ambulatory care—health services provided at
doctors' offices, clinics, or other settings without an overnight stay—improved
by 3.2 percent. Nursing home and home health care improved by 1 percent.
The bad news is that this pace is
slow, and it is even slower for minorities, the poor, and other priority
populations.
So how do we accelerate change? How
do we engage all health care stakeholders to ensure that our Nation's citizens
receive the highest quality, safest health care possible?
First, we must recognize, as HHS (Department of Health & Human Services)
Secretary Mike Leavitt has said, that we don't have a health care system in the United States; we have a large, rapidly growing health care sector.
Then we need to find ways to connect
the various parts of this sector to function more like a system, and an
important connector is health IT. It is important to note that health IT is not
a magic bullet. It alone won't transform the health care system, but it is impossible
to envision that the transformation we need can occur without the capacities it
brings.
Think for a moment about what is
happening in health care settings around the country. Millions of decisions are
being made about people's lives without the right information in hand:
- Is chemotherapy alone the best treatment for a patient with breast cancer, or should she be treated with radiation and chemotherapy?
- How do persons with diabetes, high blood pressure, and obesity manage all the different demands of their conditions?
Patients and consumers struggle with
even more basic decisions:
- Which provider to see?
- When to seek care?
- Which treatment option is best for their needs?
Many of these decisions are difficult
even in the most ideal circumstances, when there is sufficient time to assess
good, reliable information. But as we all know, these decisions frequently must
be made at times and places where information is not available, and time is of
the essence. The power of health IT can help us to harness the power of large
amounts of data to regularly assess quality and outcomes, and to put the
analysis of the reliable data into the hands of a provider or patient in a
usable format when they need it most—at the point of care or when making
decisions about care.
Health IT can be a tool to help bind
our health care delivery sector together and bring much-needed information,
services, and innovations to anyone who needs health care.
AHRQ, Health IT, and
Underserved Populations
AHRQ's
initiative on health IT is a key element of the Nation's 10-year strategy to
bring health care into the 21st century by advancing the use of information
technology.
The AHRQ initiative includes more than $166 million (FY
2004-FY 2006) in grants and contracts in 41 States to support and stimulate
investment in health IT, especially in rural and underserved areas. Through these and other projects, AHRQ and its
partners will:
- Identify challenges to health IT adoption and use as well as solutions and best practices for making health IT work.
- Encourage the use of health IT as a normal cost of doing business and market-based tools that will help hospitals and clinicians successfully incorporate new IT.
Through
this initiative, AHRQ is working to ensure that the promise and potential of
health IT is available to all Americans.
More
than 50 percent of AHRQ's health IT funding has targeted rural populations. From FY 2004-FY 2006, the amount spent for rural health IT
projects totaled $75 million.
Under
our newly funded Ambulatory Safety and Quality Initiative, we are spending $6.5
million for health IT grants targeting priority populations of a total $21 million
in grants in FY 2007. Mr. Chairman, we recently awarded one such grant—of nearly
$700,000—to the New York City Department of Health/Mental Hygiene to enable the
meaningful measurement of the quality of care, with a focus on public health
priority issues, disadvantaged populations, and small office practices.
This
project will design and test a simple and intuitive "quality dashboard"
suitable for small office practices that will integrate quality measurement and
clinical decision support at the point of care.
AHRQ is very pleased to be collaborating with the
Office of the National Coordinator of Health IT on the funding of a report to
review and analyze the best clinical evidence on use of health IT by the
underserved, elderly, and disabled. The findings of this analysis will give us
information we need to ensure that these populations reap the benefits of
health IT.
States also play a critical role in all aspects of
health care delivery. To that end, in FY 2007, we also have funded a $3
million contract with Research Triangle Institute to provide technical
assistance to up to 20 States on the best use of health IT to improve the
quality of health care for Medicaid and SCHIP beneficiaries.
Technical assistance is very critical
to the successful adoption and implementation of health IT. To assure that as
many Americans as possible benefit from our research, we have created a National Resource Center for Health IT.
The Resource Center leverages our investments in health IT by offering
help where it's needed most in real world clinical settings that may feel ill-equipped
to meet the implementation challenge. It facilitates expert and peer-to-peer
collaborative learning and fosters the growth of online communities that are
planning, implementing, and researching health IT.
AHRQ has also used the Resource Center to assist States that are initiating statewide clinical data sharing. We
have convened small, round-table working meetings of experts to share detailed
expertise with States as they determine governance and
technical architecture of their data-sharing organizations. We have met with
many States, including New York, Wyoming, Montana, Delaware, Maryland, and Georgia.
The Resource Center provides a Web
portal with capabilities to convene practitioners, encourage collaboration, and
disseminate best practices. The portal gathers communities of practices with
similar interests and concerns to share and learn. The Resource Center also supports a special portal for the Nation's community health centers, providers in the
Medicare health IT initiative, and the Indian Health Service, as they work to
adopt health IT.
Lessons
Learned
Mr. Chairman, I would like to
conclude by offering a few brief observations based upon our work in health IT.
First, high-quality health IT alone
cannot improve our health care system unless it is integrated into the very
fabric of care by incorporating systems into our individual clinical practices,
hospitals, and other settings.
Second, for most health care
settings, health IT is not likely to create "out-of-the-box" solutions.
Effective use of health IT begins with a careful examination of the health
care setting and then uses the power of IT to enhance effectiveness and
efficiency.
Third, accelerating the pace of
health IT adoption and implementation, given the level of economic investment
that would be required, requires the sharing of both knowledge and experience
through additional opportunities for voluntary peer-to-peer learning.
Finally, the development of interoperable
health IT can accelerate the pace of innovation and the speed with which
patients will benefit from new medical breakthroughs. The inherent delays in
our current system for assessing the effectiveness of new drugs, devices, and
procedures could decrease dramatically with widespread use of health IT and
advance our common goal of evidence-based medicine.
Conclusion
Mr.
Chairman, thank you for the opportunity to update you on the progress we are
making in the area of health IT, particularly for underserved populations. I am
confident that working together, we can ensure that all Americans receive
high-quality, safe health care services.
Current as of November 2007
Internet Citation:
Health Information Technology and Underserved Populations By Carolyn M. Clancy for the Third Annual Health Information Technology Summit, Washington, DC, November 1, 2007. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/news/test110107.htm