The Commission to End Health Care Disparities urges ambulatory practices to collect demographic data to improve quality of care, according to a white paper by the Commission.
The paper, "Collecting and using race, ethnicity and language data in ambulatory settings: A white paper with recommendations from the Commission to End Health Care Disparities," outlines several benefits of collecting demographic data, including eliminating disparities, optimizing practice resources to improve quality, improving the data used in pay-for-performance incentive programs and competing in a quickly-changing market. The paper also recommends strategies for collecting and using patient demographic data in ambulatory settings.
The Commission says one way to optimize investment in quality improvement initiatives is to determine which sub-populations are more likely to receive poorer quality care and target those populations for specific interventions. The paper suggests optimizing investment in QI efforts is particularly important for smaller physician practices because physicians in these settings have historically been less involved in formal QI activities than physicians in large practices.
Read "Collecting and using race, ethnicity and language data in ambulatory settings: A white paper with recommendations from the Commission to End Health Care Disparities" (pdf).
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The paper, "Collecting and using race, ethnicity and language data in ambulatory settings: A white paper with recommendations from the Commission to End Health Care Disparities," outlines several benefits of collecting demographic data, including eliminating disparities, optimizing practice resources to improve quality, improving the data used in pay-for-performance incentive programs and competing in a quickly-changing market. The paper also recommends strategies for collecting and using patient demographic data in ambulatory settings.
The Commission says one way to optimize investment in quality improvement initiatives is to determine which sub-populations are more likely to receive poorer quality care and target those populations for specific interventions. The paper suggests optimizing investment in QI efforts is particularly important for smaller physician practices because physicians in these settings have historically been less involved in formal QI activities than physicians in large practices.
Read "Collecting and using race, ethnicity and language data in ambulatory settings: A white paper with recommendations from the Commission to End Health Care Disparities" (pdf).
Related Articles on Quality:
Five Months Later, MU Health in Compliance With Federal Patient Safety Standards
UC Regent, Husband Lead the Way to Establishing Prevention Guidelines for Surgical Infections
Connecticut's Windham Hospital Focuses on Professional Education to Reduce Readmissions