Implementation of Health Information Technology to Maximize Efficiency of Resource Utilization in a Geographically Dispersed Prenatal Care Delivery System

2011 ◽  
Vol 29 (04) ◽  
pp. 251-258
Author(s):  
Marlo Cochran ◽  
Russell Snyder ◽  
Elizabeth Thomas ◽  
Daniel Freeman ◽  
Gary Hankins
JAMA ◽  
2012 ◽  
Vol 307 (24) ◽  
Author(s):  
Asaf Bitton ◽  
Lydia A. Flier ◽  
Ashish K. Jha

2015 ◽  
Vol 5 (1) ◽  
pp. 32-45 ◽  
Author(s):  
Liam Peyton ◽  
Jaspreet Bindra ◽  
Aladdin Baarah ◽  
Austin Chamney ◽  
Craig Kuziemsky

Health information technology (HIT) offers great potential for supporting healthcare delivery, particularly collaborative care delivery that is provided across multiple settings and providers. To date much of HIT design has focused on digitizing data or processes on a departmental or healthcare provider basis. However, this bounded approach has not scaled well for supporting community based care across disparate providers or settings because of the lack of boundaries (e.g. disprate data and processes) that exist in community based care. Cloud computing approaches that leverage mobile form applications for developing integrated HIT solutions have the potential to support collaborative healthcare delivery in the community. However, to date there is a shortage of methods that describe how to develop integrated cloud computing solutions to support community based care delivery. In particular there is a need for methods that identify how to incorporate boundaries into cloud computing systems design. This paper uses a three year case study of the design of the Palliative Care Information System (PAL-IS) to provide system design insight on cloud computing approaches that leverage mobile forms applications to support community care management.


Author(s):  
Chenzhang Bao ◽  
Indranil R. Bardhan

Under a traditional fee-for-service payment model, healthcare providers typically compromise the quality of care in order to reduce costs. Drawing on data from a national sample of accountable care organizations (ACOs), we study whether financial incentives offered under the Affordable Care Act led to fundamental changes in care delivery. Our research suggests that effective use of health information technology (IT) by ACO providers is critical in balancing competing goals of quality and efficiency. Unlike hospitals that did not participate in value-based care initiatives, ACOs were able to generate better quality outcomes while also improving overall efficiency. Furthermore, ACO providers that used health IT effectively demonstrated better patient health outcomes due to greater information integration with other providers. In other words, ACOs created value by not only reducing the cost of care but also improving patient outcomes simultaneously. Our research provides a roadmap for practitioners to succeed in a value-based healthcare environment and for policy makers to design better incentives to promote interorganizational information sharing across providers. Our findings suggest that healthcare policy needs to incorporate appropriate incentives to foster effective IT use for care coordination between healthcare providers.


Oncology ◽  
2017 ◽  
pp. 187-202
Author(s):  
Liam Peyton ◽  
Jaspreet Bindra ◽  
Aladdin Baarah ◽  
Austin Chamney ◽  
Craig E. Kuziemsky

Health information technology (HIT) offers great potential for supporting healthcare delivery, particularly collaborative care delivery that is provided across multiple settings and providers. To date much of HIT design has focused on digitizing data or processes on a departmental or healthcare provider basis. However, this bounded approach has not scaled well for supporting community based care across disparate providers or settings because of the lack of boundaries (e.g. disprate data and processes) that exist in community based care. Cloud computing approaches that leverage mobile form applications for developing integrated HIT solutions have the potential to support collaborative healthcare delivery in the community. However, to date there is a shortage of methods that describe how to develop integrated cloud computing solutions to support community based care delivery. In particular there is a need for methods that identify how to incorporate boundaries into cloud computing systems design. This paper uses a three year case study of the design of the Palliative Care Information System (PAL-IS) to provide system design insight on cloud computing approaches that leverage mobile forms applications to support community care management.


Author(s):  
Jordan Everson ◽  
Melinda Beeuwkes Buntin

The potential for health information technology (HIT) to reshape the information-intensive healthcare industry has been recognized for decades. Nevertheless, the adoption and use of IT in healthcare has lagged behind other industries, motivating governments to take a role in supporting its use to achieve envisioned benefits. This dynamic has led to three major strands of research. Firstly, the relatively slow and uneven adoption of HIT, coupled with government programs intended to speed adoption, has raised the issue of who is adopting HIT, and the impact of public programs on rates of adoption and diffusion. Secondly, the realization of benefits from HIT appears to be occurring more slowly than its proponents had hoped, leading to an ongoing need to empirically measure the effect of its use on the quality and efficiency of healthcare as well as the contexts under which benefits are best realized. Thirdly, increases in the adoption and use of HIT have led to the potential for interoperable exchange of patient information and the dynamic use of that information to drive improvements in the healthcare delivery system; however, these applications require developing new approaches to overcoming barriers to collaboration between healthcare organizations and the HIT industry itself. Intertwined through each of these issues is the interaction between HIT as a tool for standardization and systemic change in the practice of healthcare, and healthcare professionals’ desire to preserve autonomy within the increasingly structured healthcare delivery system. Innovative approaches to improve the interactions between professionals, technology, and market forces are therefore necessary to capitalize on the promise of HIT and develop a continually learning health system.


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