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Overview

Validating data from Health IT systems is the cornerstone of effective Health IT Enabled QI. Ensuring that Health IT-generated reports and data reflect an accurate picture of the care and outcomes of your population ensures that data is actionable for quality improvement, monitoring as well as many other purposes. This validation must be ongoing as system , provider, workflow, and other changes, can all impact accuracy of data. This section provides worksheets, guides, and tips for validating data.

Data Accuracy Resources
Section IV - Acknowledgements
Nathan Botts
/ Categories: Archived

Section IV - Acknowledgements

Guide to Improving Care Processes and Outcomes in FQHCs

Origins and Ongoing Refinement of this Guide: The content in this resource is drawn from and builds on widely used CDS/QI tools and strategies that have evolved over the past decade. The HITEQ Center plans to continue refining this Guide based on input from users like you, so please consider sharing your feedback through the comment form.

  • The content in this Guide is an adapted and expanded version of care process improvement guidance on healthit.gov. That original material was developed by Jerome Osheroff, MD, TMIT Consulting, LLC in collaboration with ONC and Deloitte, and this version on HITEQ was also developed by Osheroff/TMIT in collaboration with JSI and others.
     
  • Guide Reviewers (Individuals below each provided helpful feedback on an earlier draft of this guide; those marked with * provided particularly detailed feedback that led to substantial enhancements):
    • Sheila Allen, MPH; Chief Compliance and Quality Officer, HealthNet, Inc.
    • *Daren Anderson, MD; Director of the Weitzman Institute and VP/Chief Quality Officer of Community Health Center, Inc
    • Sasha East, MD; Internal Medicine Resident, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital
    • Renu George, MD; Internal Medicine Resident, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital
    • *Meg Meador, MPH, C-PHI;  NACHC Director of Clinical Integration and Education
    • *Jillian Maccini, MBA; Consultant, JSI
    • Laura Methvin, MD; Internal Medicine Resident, Robert Wood Johnson University Hospital
    • Alan Mitchell; Program Director, Performance Improvement, Primary Care Development Corporation (PCDC)
    • * Nivedita Mohanty, MD; Director of Evidence-based Practice, Alliance of Chicago
    • Rick Reifenberg MD, FAAP, FACP, Associate Medical Director, HealthNet Inc.
       
  • Refinements to material on this page to enhance its use and usefulness are planned based on user feedback (HITEQinfo@jsi.com).
     
  • Recommended citation for this Guide [provided by JSI/HITEQ]
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Acknowledgements

This resource collection was compiled by the HITEQ Center staff with guidance from HITEQ Advisory Committee members and collaborators of the HITEQ Center.

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Quadruple Aim

A Conceptual Framework

Improving the U.S. health care system requires four aims: improving the experience of care, improving the health of populations, reducing per capita costs and improving care team well-being. HITEQ Center resources seek to provide content and direction aligned with the goals of the Quadruple Aim

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