Electronic Health Records, Registries, and Quality Measures: What? Why? How?

Caroline E Fife, David Walker, Brett Thomson, Caroline E Fife, David Walker, Brett Thomson

Abstract

The transition from volume-based healthcare to value-based care is advancing via the reporting of quality measures, initially as a part of "pay for performance" within Medicare's Physician Quality Reporting System (PQRS) initiative. However, "value-based purchasing" requirements within the Affordable Care Act will increase the percentage of reimbursement linked to the reporting of quality measures. Currently, only five PQRS measures are relevant to wound care, and the venous ulcer care measure will be retired this year. PQRS measures in wound care can only be reported via claims or qualified patient registries, and no wound care measures are endorsed by the National Quality Forum (NQF). The recent Health Informational Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act promoting the adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) requires quality reporting by clinicians wishing to access EHR adoption money. These clinicians will be able to comply with the next stage of "meaningful use" of EHRs, beginning in 2015, by submitting data to a qualified registry, and registry submission may eventually be required by Medicare for reimbursement of some wound care products and procedures. Other specialties are using registries to track adverse events, measure compliance with practice guidelines, and for comparative effectiveness data. Evidence-based measures should be developed as electronic measures that can be submitted directly from the clinicians' EHR. New wound care measures should undergo testing for NQF endorsement. The not-for-profit U.S. Wound Registry is a qualified patient registry that is available for PQRS reporting, measure testing, and future registry submission requirements. The lack of tested wound care quality measures threatens the entire wound care industry, as quality-based reimbursement is not limited to physician payment. Quality measures are an increasingly important part of many Medicare payment systems, including those for acute care hospitals, hospital-based outpatient wound care departments, and accountable care organizations.

Figures

https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/instance/3865620/bin/fig-1.jpg
Caroline E. Fife, MD

Source: PubMed

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