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First published February 28, 2007 as JAMIA PrePrint; doi:10.1197/jamia.M2125
Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association 2007;14(3):320-328
© 2007 American Medical Informatics Association


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Submitted on April 12, 2006
Accepted on February 9, 2007

Electronic Health Records in Four Community Physician Practices: Impact on Quality and Cost of Care

W. Pete Welch PhD1*, Dawn Bazarko RN, MPH2, Kimberly Ritten2, Yo Burgess3, Robert Harmon MD, MPH4, and Lewis G. Sandy MD, MBA2

Affiliation of the authors: 1 The Lewin Group, Falls Church, VA (current); Center for Health Care Policy and Evaluation/Ingenix, Edina, MN (at time of research) ; 2 UnitedHealthcare, Edina, MN; 3 Center for Health Care Policy and Evaluation/Ingenix, Edina, MN; 4 Duval County (FL) Health Department, Jacksonville, FL (current); Center for Health Care Policy and Evaluation/Ingenix, Edina, MN (at time of research)

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.

Objective To assess the impact of the electronic health record (EHR) on cost (i.e., payments to providers) and process measures of quality of care.

Study Design Retrospective before-after-study-control. From the database of a large managed care organization (MCO), we obtained the claims of patients from four community physician practices that implemented the EHR and from about 50 comparison practices without the EHR in the same counties. The diverse patient and practice populations were chosen to be a sample more representative of typical private practices than has previously been studied.

Measurements For four chronic conditions, we used commercially-available software to analyze cost per episode over a year and the rate of adherence to clinical guidelines as a measure of quality.

Results The implementation of the EHR had a modest positive impact on the quality measure of guideline adherence for hypertension and hyperlipidemia, but no significant impact for diabetes and coronary artery disease. No measurable impact on the short-term cost per episode was found. Discussions with the study practices revealed that the timing and comprehensiveness of EHR implementation varied across practices, creating an intervention variable that was heterogeneous.

Conclusions Guideline adherence increased across practices without EHRs and slightly faster in practices with EHRs. Measuring the impact of EHRs on cost per episode was challenging, because of the difficulty of completely capturing the long-term episodic costs of a chronic condition. Few practices associated with the study MCO had implemented EHRs in any form, much less utilizing standardized protocols.







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