Health Information Exchange Saves $1 Million in Emergency Care Costs for Medicare
SEATTLE, OR – New research shows that having access to data from a health information exchange (HIE) improved the quality of emergency care and saved more than $1 million in patient charges, or nearly $2,000 per patient, according to a study presented in Seattle at the annual meeting of the American College of Emergency Physicians.
“Nearly 90 percent of participants [89 percent] said that quality of patient care was improved, and 82 percent of participants said that valuable time was saved, reporting a mean time savings of 105 minutes per patient,” according to study author Dr. Christine Carr of the Medical University of South Carolina.
Over a 12-month period, starting February 2012, there were 325,740 patient encounters and 7,525 log-ons to the HIE by 231 eligible clinicians at 11 emergency departments in South Carolina. The research team based its conclusions on a sample of 532 patients from this population who had information available in the HIE and for whom the clinicians caring for the patients completed a survey.
Within this sample they found that having access to an HIE for emergency patients resulted in savings from avoiding the following types of services:
- Laboratory/microbiology: (187 patients) $2,073
- Radiology: (298 patients) $476,840
- Radiology: (298 patients) $476,840
- Hospital admissions: (56 patients) $551,282
The total of savings for patients in the sample was $1,035,654, based on Medicare-allowable charges, or $1,947 per patient.
“Our research suggests that a Health Information Exchange can improve quality and save money in an emergency care setting,” said study author Dr. Steven Saef, also of the Medical University of South Carolina. “As emergency physicians, we are dedicated to improving care for our patients and also to reducing health care costs. This study shows we can do both. Furthermore, when one considers that we are only scratching the surface of what this new resource can do, the implications are staggering.”