Sustainable Approach to Justice, Equity, Diversity, and Inclusion Through Better Quality Measurement

The US health care industry has broadly adopted performance and quality measures that are extracted from electronic health records and connected to payment incentives that hope to improve declining life expectancy and health status and reduce costs. While the development of a quality measurement inf...

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Published inCirculation Cardiovascular quality and outcomes Vol. 17; no. 5; p. e010791
Main Authors Okeke, Nkem, Hennessey, Kerrilynn C, Sitapati, Amy M, Weisshaar, Dana, Shah, Nishant P, Alicki, Rebecca, Haft, Howard
Format Journal Article
LanguageEnglish
Published United States 01.05.2024
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Summary:The US health care industry has broadly adopted performance and quality measures that are extracted from electronic health records and connected to payment incentives that hope to improve declining life expectancy and health status and reduce costs. While the development of a quality measurement infrastructure based on electronic health record data was an important first step in addressing US health outcomes, these metrics, reflecting the average performance across diverse populations, do not adequately adjust for population demographic differences, social determinants of health, or ecosystem vulnerability. Like society as a whole, health care must confront the powerful impact that social determinants of health, race, ethnicity, and other demographic variations have on key health care performance indicators and quality metrics. Tools that are currently available to capture and report the health status of Americans lack the granularity, complexity, and standardization needed to improve health and address disparities at the local level. In this article, we discuss the current and future state of electronic clinical quality measures through a lens of equity.
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ISSN:1941-7713
1941-7705
DOI:10.1161/CIRCOUTCOMES.123.010791