Health IT Tools
Help with Care and Costs
By Carolyn M.
Clancy, M.D.
April 5, 2011
More hospitals
and doctors’ offices are using health
information technology (health IT). And that’s
good news for patients.
One of the most
popular uses of health IT is the electronic
health record. These records put your health
data -- medical history, medicines, allergies,
test results, and more -- all in one place. This
saves you and your medical team time. It also
reduces the chance of an error like getting a
drug you’re allergic to. A complete electronic
health record is particularly helpful in an
emergency.
Other types of
health IT tools can help your medical team
provide safer, more effective care. They can
also assist you in making good decisions for you
and your family.
Work supported by
my agency, the Agency for Healthcare Research
and Quality (AHRQ), shows how health IT tools
can save time and money. They can help prevent
trips to the hospital emergency room (ER) and
even prevent life-threatening conditions.
For example, when
kids get sick at school or day care, parents
often must leave work to go to the doctor’s
office or hospital ER. Just over half (57
percent) of men and women had access to paid
sick days in 2009, a
recent survey found.
That means that minor illnesses that can be
easily treated can end up costing a lot of money
in health bills and lost wages. But technology
is allowing a child’s own doctor, with parents’
permission, to make a "virtual" office visit to
schools and day care centers.
Through
technology, trained assistants can use
equipment, like special cameras and an
electronic stethoscope, to arrange virtual
visits with children’s doctors. Physicians
diagnose, prescribe, and discuss treatments with
parents and school staff over a secure Internet
connection.
The
Health-e-Access Telemedicine program has
lowered health costs by more than 23 percent by
reducing ER visits. The program includes 10
child care centers and 12 elementary schools in
the Rochester, NY, area. It is now expanding to
assisted living and senior day care centers.
Another
health IT program makes it less likely that
people in nursing homes will develop
pressure ulcers.
Pressure ulcers,
or bed sores, occur when patients stay in one
position too long. People who are bedridden or
use a wheelchair are at risk. If not caught
early, pressure ulcers can cause serious
infections and even become life-threatening.
A computer
program called On-Time helps identify patients
who are likely to develop pressure ulcers and
then creates special care plans and reports. It
encourages nurses, nursing assistants,
dieticians, and others to work closely on care
planning and follow up. In the 21 facilities
that used this program, the incidence of
pressure ulcers declined by more than 42
percent.
On-Time is now
used in more than 75 nursing homes. New research
may show how to prevent other problems in
nursing homes, such as falls.
Of course, the
best computer program is no substitute for
dedicated health providers and involved patients
and families. But when you or a family member
gets sick, health IT tools can provide new
options for better quality and lower costs.
I believe these
tools enhance, not replace, the doctor-patient
relationship. They also make it easier to
deliver the right care to the right person at
the right time.
I’m Dr. Carolyn
Clancy, and that’s my advice on how to navigate
the health care system.
Resources
Agency
for Healthcare Research and Quality
Healthcare 411: Radiocast/Podcast, March 2,
2011. Keeping Kids in School via
Telemedicine. Available at:
http://healthcare411.ahrq.gov/radiocastseg.aspx?id=1179&type=seg
[Transcript]
Healthcare 411: Radiocast/Podcast, March 16,
2011. Preventing Bed Sores. Available
at:
http://healthcare411.ahrq.gov/radiocastseg.aspx?id=1183&type=seg
[Transcript]
AHRQ-Funded
Projects. Health IT Implementation Stories.
Long-Term Care Facilities Embrace Health
Information Technology. Available at:
http://healthit.ahrq.gov/portal/server.pt?open=514&objID=5562&mode=2&holderDisplayURL=http://wci-pubcontent/publish/communities/a_e/ahrq_funded_projects/health_it_implementation_stories/healthitimplementationstories/long_term_care_facilities_embrace_health_information_technology.html
AHRQ-Funded
Projects. Health IT Implementation Stories.
Telemedicine Project Connects Kids, Doctors for
Better Care. Available at:
http://healthit.ahrq.gov/portal/server.pt?open=514&objID=5562&mode=2&holderDisplayURL=
http://wci-pubcontent/publish/communities/a_e/ahrq_funded_projects/health_it_implementation_stories/healthitimplementationstories/
telemedicine_project_connects__kids__doctors_for_better_care.html
Institute
for Women’s Policy Studies
Paid Sick Day
Access Rates by Gender and Race/Ethnicity, 2010.
Available at:
http://www.iwpr.org/initiatives/family-leave-paid-sick-days
National
Library of Medicine
Pressure
Ulcer: MEDLINEPlus Medical Encyclopedia.
Available at:
http://www.nlm.nih.gov/medlineplus/ency/article/007071.htm
Current as of April 2011
Internet Citation:
Health IT Tools Help with Care and Costs.
Navigating the Health Care System: Advice
Columns from Dr. Carolyn Clancy, April 5, 2011.
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality,
Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/consumer/cc/cc040511.htm
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