Assessing the potential economic value of health information technology interventions in a community-based health network.
Health information professionals recognize the need to demonstrate that the benefits of health information technological (HIT) interventions outweigh their costs. However, such cost-benefit analyses are rarely conducted for HIT interventions, due in part to the lack of a standard methodology. In this study, we describe how the U.S. Public Health Service's guidelines for health economic analyses can be used to evaluate HIT interventions. This framework is described in the context of an economic analysis we are conducting for three HIT interventions to be implemented in a community-based health network caring for Medicaid beneficiaries in Durham County, North Carolina. At present, the 17,779 patients in our study cost Medicaid more than $5 million per month. In sensitivity analyses, we demonstrate that if our information intervention redirects just 10% of low-severity emergency room encounters to outpatient encounters, it will result in $12,523 of monthly savings to the local health system.
Duke Scholars
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- North Carolina
- Models, Econometric
- Medical Informatics
- Medicaid
- Humans
- Health Care Costs
- Emergency Service, Hospital
- Cost-Benefit Analysis
- Cost Savings
- Community Networks
Citation
Published In
EISSN
Publication Date
Volume
Start / End Page
Location
Related Subject Headings
- North Carolina
- Models, Econometric
- Medical Informatics
- Medicaid
- Humans
- Health Care Costs
- Emergency Service, Hospital
- Cost-Benefit Analysis
- Cost Savings
- Community Networks