Associations between Florida counties' COVID-19 case and death rates and meaningful use among Medicaid providers: Cross-sectional ecologic study.

Although the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act has accelerated adoption of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) among Medicaid providers, only half achieved Meaningful Use. Furthermore, Meaningful Use' impact on reporting and/or clinical outcomes remains un...

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Main Authors: Katherine Freeman, Judith P Monestime
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Public Library of Science (PLoS) 2022-06-01
Series:PLOS Digital Health
Online Access:https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000047
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author Katherine Freeman
Judith P Monestime
author_facet Katherine Freeman
Judith P Monestime
author_sort Katherine Freeman
collection DOAJ
description Although the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act has accelerated adoption of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) among Medicaid providers, only half achieved Meaningful Use. Furthermore, Meaningful Use' impact on reporting and/or clinical outcomes remains unknown. To address this deficit, we assessed the difference between Medicaid providers who did and did not achieve Meaningful Use regarding Florida county-level cumulative COVID-19 death, case and case fatality rates (CFR), accounting for county-level demographics, socioeconomic and clinical markers, and healthcare environment. We found that cumulative incidence rates of COVID-19 deaths and CFRs were significantly different between the 5025 Medicaid providers not achieving Meaningful Use and the 3723 achieving Meaningful Use (mean 0.8334/1000 population; SD = 0.3489 vs. mean = 0.8216/1000; SD = 0.3227, respectively) (P = .01). CFRs were .01797 and .01781, respectively, P = .04. County-level characteristics independently associated with increased COVID-19 death rates and CFRs include greater concentrations of persons of African American or Black race, lower median household income, higher unemployment, and higher concentrations of those living in poverty and without health insurance (all P < .001). In accordance with other studies, social determinants of health were independently associated with clinical outcomes. Our findings also suggest that the association between Florida counties' public health outcomes and Meaningful Use achievement may have had less to do with using EHRs for reporting of clinical outcomes and more to do with using EHRs for coordination of care-a key measure of quality. The Florida Medicaid Promoting Interoperability Program which incentivized Medicaid providers towards achieving Meaningful Use, has demonstrated success regarding both rates of adoption and clinical outcomes. Because the Program ends in 2021, we support programs such as HealthyPeople 2030 Health IT which address the remaining half of Florida Medicaid providers who have not yet achieved Meaningful Use.
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spelling doaj.art-878571d0ec23499ab397b6ccf0f011a82023-09-03T08:08:18ZengPublic Library of Science (PLoS)PLOS Digital Health2767-31702022-06-0116e000004710.1371/journal.pdig.0000047Associations between Florida counties' COVID-19 case and death rates and meaningful use among Medicaid providers: Cross-sectional ecologic study.Katherine FreemanJudith P MonestimeAlthough the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act has accelerated adoption of Electronic Health Records (EHRs) among Medicaid providers, only half achieved Meaningful Use. Furthermore, Meaningful Use' impact on reporting and/or clinical outcomes remains unknown. To address this deficit, we assessed the difference between Medicaid providers who did and did not achieve Meaningful Use regarding Florida county-level cumulative COVID-19 death, case and case fatality rates (CFR), accounting for county-level demographics, socioeconomic and clinical markers, and healthcare environment. We found that cumulative incidence rates of COVID-19 deaths and CFRs were significantly different between the 5025 Medicaid providers not achieving Meaningful Use and the 3723 achieving Meaningful Use (mean 0.8334/1000 population; SD = 0.3489 vs. mean = 0.8216/1000; SD = 0.3227, respectively) (P = .01). CFRs were .01797 and .01781, respectively, P = .04. County-level characteristics independently associated with increased COVID-19 death rates and CFRs include greater concentrations of persons of African American or Black race, lower median household income, higher unemployment, and higher concentrations of those living in poverty and without health insurance (all P < .001). In accordance with other studies, social determinants of health were independently associated with clinical outcomes. Our findings also suggest that the association between Florida counties' public health outcomes and Meaningful Use achievement may have had less to do with using EHRs for reporting of clinical outcomes and more to do with using EHRs for coordination of care-a key measure of quality. The Florida Medicaid Promoting Interoperability Program which incentivized Medicaid providers towards achieving Meaningful Use, has demonstrated success regarding both rates of adoption and clinical outcomes. Because the Program ends in 2021, we support programs such as HealthyPeople 2030 Health IT which address the remaining half of Florida Medicaid providers who have not yet achieved Meaningful Use.https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000047
spellingShingle Katherine Freeman
Judith P Monestime
Associations between Florida counties' COVID-19 case and death rates and meaningful use among Medicaid providers: Cross-sectional ecologic study.
PLOS Digital Health
title Associations between Florida counties' COVID-19 case and death rates and meaningful use among Medicaid providers: Cross-sectional ecologic study.
title_full Associations between Florida counties' COVID-19 case and death rates and meaningful use among Medicaid providers: Cross-sectional ecologic study.
title_fullStr Associations between Florida counties' COVID-19 case and death rates and meaningful use among Medicaid providers: Cross-sectional ecologic study.
title_full_unstemmed Associations between Florida counties' COVID-19 case and death rates and meaningful use among Medicaid providers: Cross-sectional ecologic study.
title_short Associations between Florida counties' COVID-19 case and death rates and meaningful use among Medicaid providers: Cross-sectional ecologic study.
title_sort associations between florida counties covid 19 case and death rates and meaningful use among medicaid providers cross sectional ecologic study
url https://doi.org/10.1371/journal.pdig.0000047
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AT judithpmonestime associationsbetweenfloridacountiescovid19caseanddeathratesandmeaningfuluseamongmedicaidproviderscrosssectionalecologicstudy