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Early Results From the Hospital Electronic Health Record Incentive Programs

Publication
Article
The American Journal of Managed CareJuly 2013
Volume 19
Issue 7

While more than 75% of hospitals are participating in the federal electronic health record incentive program, small hospitals and Critical Access hospitals lag behind.

Objectives:

To assess the level of hospital participation in the first 18 months of the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Programs, and to identify whether vulnerable hospitals lag behind.

Study Design:

Retrospective study of participation among the 4938 Medicare-certified hospitals from the beginning of the incentive payment period (June 2011) through December 2012.

Methods:

We used multivariate models to examine which types of hospitals qualified for financial incentives either through attesting to meaningful use of EHRs or by meeting the “Adopt-Implement-Upgrade” (AIU) option that requires demonstrating progress toward achieving meaningful use. We focused on small, Critical Access, and safety-net hospitals.

Results:

We found that more than 75% of all eligible US hospitals have qualified for financial incentives in the first 18 months of the program. Nearly two-thirds of these hospitals (52% of all hospitals) attested to meaningful use while the remaining one-third (24% of all hospitals) were paid under the AIU option only. Small hospitals were less likely than large hospitals to qualify for incentive payments (odds ratio [OR] = 0.49, 95% confidence interval [CI] 0.36-0.68; P <.001 across categories). Critical Access hospitals also had lower odds of incentive payment (OR = 0.69, 95% CI 0.57-0.84, P <.001). Safety-net hospitals were more likely to qualify for payments overall (OR = 2.51; 95% CI 1.92-3.38, P <.001), but did so primarily through AIU.

Conclusions:

There is broad participation in the federally led incentive program to promote nationwide EHR uptake. Lower rates of participation among smaller hospitals and Critical Access hospitals merit close monitoring to ensure that broad adoption is achieved.

Am J Manag Care. 2013;19(7):e273-e284

  • The federal government is providing financial incentives to hospitals to encourage adoption and use of electronic health records (EHRs). The level of participation in the incentive program overall and by key groups of hospitals is not widely known.

  • We found broad engagement, with more than three-fourths of hospitals receiving incentive payment. Further, most hospitals that attested to meeting federal meaningful use criteria went well beyond the minimum required thresholds and were using their EHRs broadly for all patients.

  • Key policy challenges that remain include bringing small, Critical Access hospitals along and helping safety-net institutions transition to achieving meaningful use.

The 2009 Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act authorizes the federal government to implement policies to incent hospitals, physicians, and other healthcare professionals to adopt electronic health records (EHRs) and use them in ways expected to improve care (“meaningful use”).1 The Act was motivated by broad consensus that persistent quality and efficiency challenges in our healthcare system stem, at least in part, from reliance on paper-based records.2 The primary mechanism to promote meaningful use of EHRs under HITECH is direct payments to eligible professionals and hospitals, for which the Act set aside $27 billion.

For hospitals, there are 2 approaches to qualify for incentives. The first is “attestation,” in which hospitals report that they have met a set of federally defined meaningful use criteria using a certified EHR technology. The alternative, which is open primarily to hospitals with at least 10% Medicaid patient volume, is known as Adopt-Implement-Upgrade (AIU) and allows eligible hospitals to receive an incentive payment before they meet meaningful use. The AIU option was created in response to data suggesting that safety-net hospitals would have trouble accessing the capital required to purchase and fully implement an EHR.3 The AIU option therefore sought to ensure that HITECH did not result in a digital divide. While AIU helps in the short term by giving financially stressed hospitals access to capital to support EHR adoption, hospitals that choose this option may struggle in the long run when they have to play catch-up and achieve the same requirements of increasingly sophisticated EHR use as other hospitals.

While the incentive program has been in place for nearly 2 years, we lack a comprehensive evaluation of the types of hospitals that have qualified for incentives, and whether the program is leaving certain groups of hospitals behind. These issues are important for 2 reasons. First, data collected prior to HITECH revealed a digital divide in which large, academic teaching institutions were far more likely to have EHRs compared with smaller, rural, and safety-net institutions.4 Second, the benefits from EHRs are substantially greater when there is broad adoption and connectivity between systems.5 These “network” effects will only be realized if the incentive program significantly increases adoption, and does not simply reward those who already had EHR systems. Therefore, empirical data on how many hospitals have received incentives, and whether there are systematic differences in the kinds of hospitals receiving the incentives, are critically important.

To address this gap, we use data from the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS), the agency administering the EHR Incentive Programs, to answer 4 questions: (1) What proportion of US hospitals have qualified for incentive payments through the programs, and how many of these hospitals were capable of qualifying prior to the programs? (2) Are certain types of hospitals, specifically small, Critical Access or safety-net institutions, less likely to receive payments compared with other institutions? (3) To what extent are safety-net institutions opting for the AIU approach to receive payments? (4) And finally, to what extent are the meaningful use criteria serving as a minimum for EHR use or are hospitals going beyond the basic requirements to widely use EHR functionalities for all their patients? Our findings offer a comprehensive examination of national data on the implementation of HITECH through 2012, with a focus on how incentives are being distributed across US hospitals.

METHODSData and Sample

Data on hospital participation in the first stage6 of the EHR Incentive Programs as of December 31, 2012, came from CMS and were made available to our research team through the Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) for Health Information Technology at the Department of Health and Human Services. This provided unique access to the list of hospitals that qualified for payment under AIU and Medicaid Stage 1 meaningful use, which is not publicly released along with hospitals that have attested to Stage 1 meaningful use under Medicare. AIU-eligible hospitals are acute care hospitals with at least 10 percent Medicaid patient volume and children’s hospitals; to receive AIU payment, eligible hospitals must adopt, implement, or upgrade a certified EHR technology during the first year of participation in the program.

The CMS data also included the specific meaningful use criteria met by attesting hospitals, and the level of achievement for each of those criteria. Meaningful use criteria come in 2 varieties: the first type requires that the EHR perform specific tasks (ie, dichotomous measures), such as having the capability to exchange clinical data electronically. The second type, which is more common, focuses on broadbased clinical use of specific functions and is reported as a continuous variable, with the meaningful use criteria specifying a threshold that has to be achieved to receive credit. For example, the criterion for computerized provider order entry (CPOE) for medications requires that medications are ordered electronically for at least 30% of patients in a hospital.6

Appendix Table 1

We used the Medicare-certified list of 4938 hospitals to identify hospitals eligible for, but not participating in, the incentive program. We assigned characteristics to hospitals based on their responses to the 2011 American Hospital Association (AHA) survey. We obtained hospital financial data, including each institution’s Disproportionate Share (DSH) Index, from Medicare Cost Reports, which are publicly available for nearly all Medicare-eligible hospitals. When we merged the sources of data, 275 hospitals (5.6%) were missing 1 or more characteristics, resulting in an analytic sample of 4663 hospitals ().

Measures

Outcome Measures. We classified hospitals into 1 of 3 mutually exclusive groups: (1) hospitals that attested to Stage 1 meaningful use under the Medicare or Medicaid EHR Incentive Program; (2) hospitals that chose to follow the AIU option; and (3) all remaining Medicare-certified hospitals, including those that registered for the incentive program but did not qualify for payment, as well as those that have not engaged with the program in any form. If a hospital attested to meaningful use as well as qualified for AIU payment (which is allowed under the program), we categorized it in the attested group (Group 1). To assess the proportion of Group 1 hospitals that appeared to be close to attaining (or perhaps had already attained) Stage 1 meaningful use prior to the program period, we leveraged prior work to define and determine which hospitals met a meaningful use proxy measure using mid-2010 data from the AHA Information Technology Supplement.7

We also examined the degree of sophistication of EHR use among attesting hospitals (Group 1). For the subset of meaningful use criteria that are measured on a continuous scale, we focused on the degree of deployment of these meaningful use functionalities to determine whether hospitals did just enough to meet the thresholds or whether they deployed these electronic functionalities widely across the institution We defined a “sophisticated” hospital as one that met all 5 dichotomous criteria and the 9 continuous criteria at least 90% of the time in the reporting period. We also examined which hospitals were able to achieve the medication CPOE measure, arguably one of the hardest criteria, for at least 90% of patients.

Hospital Characteristics. Because pre-HITECH data found that small hospitals in general, and Critical Access hospitals (CAHs) in particular, were less likely to have EHRs,4 we were interested in assessing the degree to which these institutions were receiving incentives. In addition, safety-net institutions—those with a high DSH Index&mdash;were also less likely to have adopted EHR systems, due in part to greater difficulty accessing required capital.3 Therefore, we sought to assess whether these institutions were receiving incentives at the same rate as non-safety-net hospitals.

We examined an additional set of hospital characteristics, either because prior data suggest that they are associated with differential EHR adoption or because they are of policy interest.These characteristics included ownership (for-profit, nonprofit private, or public), teaching status, whether the hospital was affiliated with a system, whether the hospital was part of a system that offered a health maintenance organization (HMO) product, geographic location (urban/rural and region), and 3 dimensions of financial health (operating margin, capitalization, liquidity). Financial variables were calculated using an approach8 that captures financial health over a 3-year period (2007-2009) to best reflect the ability of hospitals to invest in IT systems at the start of HITECH.

Analysis. We first examined the proportion of hospitals (and associated proportion of discharges and of beds) that attested to Stage 1 meaningful use, met AIU only (ie, did not attest), and were not participating. We then examined the bivariate relationships between these 3 groups and the hospital characteristics of interest. We subsequently built multivariable logistic regression models to identify the independent associations between each characteristic and our 4 outcomes of interest: hospitals that qualified for incentives versus those that did not, hospitals that attested to meaningful use versus those that chose AIU (among those that qualified for incentives), and 2 measures of sophistication. Finally, we generated descriptive statistics that reflect the distribution of hospital achievement for each of the 9 continuous meaningful use criteria.

RESULTS

Hospital Participation in the EHR Incentive Programs We found that 75.5% of eligible US hospitals qualified for payments under the federal EHR incentive programs through the end of 2012. Just over half of all hospitals qualified for incentive payment because they had attested to Stage 1 meaningful use (2512 hospitals, or 52% of all hospitals, representing 56% of beds and 59% of all discharges, Figure). An additional 24% of hospitals (1141 hospitals, representing 25% of beds and discharges) qualified for payment under the AIU path. Approximately 1 in 4 hospitals (1185 or 24% of hospitals, representing 18% of beds and 16% of discharges) did not participate. Among the 1573 hospitals attesting to Stage 1 meaningful use for which the meaningful use proxy measure was available, 93% (1468 hospitals) did not meet the proxy measure in 2010 (ie, appeared to be a “new” meaningful user) and the remaining 7% (105 hospitals) were at least capable of meeting Stage 1 meaningful use prior to the incentive program.

Table 1

Characteristics of Hospitals Qualifying for Incentive Payments. In bivariate analyses, we found important differences between hospitals that attested to meaningful use, those that chose AIU, and those that did not participate. Consistent with our hypothesis, we found that small hospitals were less likely than large hospitals to have qualified for payment (69% vs 82%, P value for differences across groups <.001, ). Similarly, we found that CAHs were less likely to have qualified for payment than non-CAHs (68% vs 79%, P <.001 across categories). Most of this difference was due to lower rates of AIU (18% among CAHs compared with 26% among non-CAHs, P <.001). We found no evidence that safety-net hospitals (those in the highest DSH quartile) were less likely to receive incentives under HITECH. In fact, safety-net hospitals had substantially higher rates of incentive payment compared withhospitals with the lowest DSH index (82% versus 65%, P value for differences across the 4 quartiles <.001), which was driven by higher AIU participation.

Table 2

In multivariate models that adjusted for our set of hospital characteristics, we found similar results. Small hospitals had less than half the odds of qualifying for incentives compared with large institutions (OR = 0.49, 95% CI 0.36-0.68 for small, P <.001 across categories, ). Even when taking size into account, we found that CAHs were less likely to have received incentives compared with non-CAHs (OR = 0.69, 95% CI 0.57-0.84, P <.001). In contrast, safety-net hospitals had more than twice the odds of receiving incentives compared with hospitals in the lowest quartile of DSH (OR = 2.51, 95% CI 1.92-3.28), and odds increased for each DSH quartile (P <.001 across all categories).

Table 3

Table 4

Characteristics of Hospitals That Attested to Meaningful Use Versus Adopt-Implement-Upgrade. Among the 75% of hospitals that qualified for incentives, the key difference between those that attested to meaningful use versus those that met AIU was safety-net status. Hospitals in the highest DSH quartile had 42% lower odds of having attested to meaningful use compared with having chosen AIU (OR = 0.58, 95% CI 0.44-0.75, ). The middle 2 quartiles of DSH had similarly lower odds of having attested to meaningful use versus having chosen AIU (OR = 0.61, 95% CI 0.47-0.79 for quartile 3 and 0.70, 95% CI 0.54-0.91 for quartile 2; P <.001 across the 4 quartiles). We did not find systematic differences in whether hospitals qualified for incentives under meaningful use or AIU based on size or Critical Access status ().

Sophistication of Meaningful Use. Among the 52% of hospitals that attested to meaningful use, the majority substantially exceeded the minimum threshold for each of the continuous criteria (Table 4). For example, although meaningful use requires medication CPOE to be used for at least 30% of patients, median adherence was 92% with an interquartile range of 74% to 99%. Similarly, for the 5 measures requiring a 50% threshold, median adherence was above 95%, ranging from 96% for vital signs to 100% for electronic copy of health information and discharge instructions.

Appendix Table 2

Appendix Table 3

The only characteristic that distinguished sophisticated meaningful users from those that attested but did not at least achieve 90%use for all criteria was whether the hospital was part of a system that offered an HMO product (OR =1.33, 95% CI 1.02-1.74, P = .038, ). When we examined medication CPOE sophistication alone, we again found that offering an HMO product was associated with at least 90% use (OR = 1.39, 95% CI 1.08-1.78, P =.01). We also found that for-profit hospitals were less likely to be a sophisticated CPOE user compared with not-for-profit hospitals (OR = 0.65, 95% CI 0.51-0.83, ). We did not find differences on either measure of sophistication for our 3 characteristics of interest: size, CAH, and safety-net status.

DISCUSSION

In an early examination of the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs, the centerpiece of the HITECH Act, we found that more than 3 in 4 hospitals are participating, and that more than half have achieved Stage 1 meaningful use. While small hospitals in general and Critical Access hospitals in particular are less likely to have received incentives, the vast majority of both groups are participating in the program, and half had attested to meaningful use. Further, we found that safety-net hospitals were as or even more likely to qualify for incentives. Taken as a whole, our study finds little evidence for the concern that the HITECH Act will give additional resources to wellheeled hospitals that already have EHRs while setting up struggling institutions to be penalized later. While differences exist in who is receiving incentive payments and who is not, overall the incentives seem to be flowing to a broad swath of US hospitals.

Any federal incentive program that rewards hospitals for adopting and using an expensive technology such as EHRs while penalizing those who do not (which HITECH will do starting in 2015) runs the risk of worsening the gap between wealthy and poor hospitals. Indeed, evidence prior to HITECH suggested that there were important differences in EHR adoption based on size, Critical Access status, and safety-net status.4,9 Based on this concern, federal policy makers created a more flexible path to incentives, the AIU approach, which provides upfront capital to hospitals that are working toward achieving meaningful use. Our findings suggest that safety-net hospitals are availing themselves of this path, using it far more often than other institutions. Other groups of hospitals that were expected to struggle to achieve meaningful use, in particular small hospitals and CAHs, are attesting at similar rates to other institutions.

In addition, hospitals attesting to meaningful use are not simply doing the minimum necessary to receive the incentives; instead, the vast majority of patients in these hospitals are being cared for using EHRs. For policy makers, this finding should offer reassurance that they selected thresholds that were achievable. It also suggests that an approach of gradually raising the threshold may not be necessary, and future criteria could instead focus on new uses of EHRs that may deliver greater improvements in both the quality and costs of care.

As policy makers plan for future stages of the EHR incentive programs, our findings point to challenges that lie ahead. First, although small hospitals and CAHs are only modestly behind, the gap has the potential to widen as the program matures. If a subset of smaller, Critical Access hospitals take longer or fail to meet Stage 1 altogether, the financial penalties slated to begin in 2015 could make EHR adoption even more difficult for these institutions. The challenge for safety-net institutions is somewhat different. Although they are faring well under the incentive program, whether those that have gone down the AIU path will be able to transition to becoming meaningful users on the accelerated timeline is unclear and will need to be closely tracked.

Our study contributes to the growing body of work examining the impact of HITECH on EHR adoption. During the first year of HITECH, DesRoches et al found that 26.6% of hospitals had adopted at least a basic EHR and 18.4% of hospitals could meet a proxy measure of meaningful use.4 They also found evidence of a digital divide with small, nonteaching, and rural hospitals adopting EHRs to a lesser extent than other types of hospitals. Compared with these data, our results suggest substantial progress. We found that in the year prior to the onset of incentives, only 7% of hospitals that eventually attested could meet the criteria for meaningful use. In the past 2 years, ONC released a report on EHR adoption trends over time,10 and CMS has issued monthly reports that include the number of hospitals that have received payment under the EHR Incentive Programs.11 More detailed data from the Government Accountability Office in 2011 reported many of the same bivariate relationships that we observed (eg, higher participation among larger hospitals).12,13 Our study extends this literature in several ways—by examining the full set of hospitals that qualified for incentive payments under both the attestation and AIU approaches, by assessing whether key types of hospitals are falling behind, and by reporting the degree to which hospitals attesting to meaningful use are going beyond the basic thresholds required by the criteria.

Our study has important limitations. First, we were unable to assess where hospitals that did not participate in the program stood with respect to EHR adoption. It may be that these hospitals have responded, but not quickly enough to have qualified for an incentive payment through 2012, and that over the next year they will catch up to their larger and better-resourced counterparts. Alternatively, given the persistence of a digital divide in other measures of EHR adoption, these non-participating small hospitals and CAHs may still have substantial work ahead to qualify for incentives.4 Second, we were unable to definitively differentiate which hospitals adopted EHRs or achieved meaningful use specifically in response to the incentives, and which hospitals had already done so or would have done so without the incentives. We therefore are not certain about the extent to which HITECH is driving EHR adoption or the achievement of meaningful use. However, electronic functionalities that have been adopted most quickly over the past 2 years are those required for meaningful use, suggesting that the program is likely playing an important role.10 Finally, our findings reflect achievement of the first stage of a 3-part program. Upcoming stages of meaningful use are expected to be more challenging and our results may not predict how hospitals will fare.

In summary, we examined the uptake of the federal incentive program designed to achieve widespread adoption and use of electronic health records across US hospitals. Our findings show broad engagement, with more than three-fourths of hospitals qualifying for incentives. Further, among the half of all hospitals that attested to meeting meaningful use through 2012, most were able to go well beyond the minimum required threshold. However, key policy challenges remain, including bringing small, Critical Access hospitals along and helping safety-net institutions transition to achieving meaningful use. Meeting these challenges will be critical to ensuring that all Americans, regardless of where they are treated, receive highquality care.Author Affiliations: From University of Michigan School of Information and School of Public Health (JA-M), Ann Arbor, MI; Office of the NationalCoordinator for Health Information Technology at the Department of Health and Human Services (MFF, JK), Washington, DC; Harvard School of Public Health (AKJ), Boston, MA.

Funding Source: Drs Adler-Milstein and Jha were supported by The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.

Author Disclosures: The authors (JA-M, MFF, JK, AKJ) report no relationship or financial interest with any entity that would pose a conflict of interest with the subject matter of this article.

Authorship Information: Concept and design (JA-M, MFF, JK, AKJ); acquisition of data (MFF, JK, AKJ); analysis and interpretation of data (JA-M, MFF, JK, AKJ); drafting of the manuscript (JA-M, MFF, JK, AKJ); critical revision of the manuscript for important intellectual content (JA-M, MFF, JK, AKJ); statistical analysis (JA-M, MFF); provision of study materials or patients (MFF, JK); obtaining funding (JA-M, AKJ); administrative, technical, or logistic support (JA-M, MFF, JK, AKJ); and supervision (JA-M, MFF, JK, AKJ).

Address correspondence to: Julia Adler-Milstein, PhD, University of Michigan, School of Information, 4376 North Quad, Ann Arbor, MI 48109. E-mail: juliaam@umich.edu.1. Blumenthal D. Launching HITECH. N Engl J Med. 2010;362(5): 382-385.

2. Blumenthal D. Wiring the health system — origins and provisions of a new federal program. N Engl J Med. 2011;365(24):2323-2329.

3. Jha AK, DesRoches CM, Shields AE, et al. Evidence of an emerging digital divide among hospitals that care for the poor. Health Aff. 2009;28(6):w1160-w1170.

4. DesRoches CM, Worzala C, Joshi MS, Kralovec PD, Jha AK. Small, nonteaching, and rural hospitals continue to be slow in adopting electronichealth record systems. Health Aff. 2012;31(5):1092-1099.

5. Walker J, Pan E, Johnston D, Adler-Milstein J, Bates DW, Middleton B. The value of health care information exchange and interoperability. Health Aff. 2005:W5-10-18.

6. Blumenthal D, Tavenner M. The “meaningful use” regulation for electronic health records. N Engl J Med. 2010;363:501-504.

7. Jha AK, Burke MF, DesRoches C, et al. Progress toward meaningful use: hospitals’ adoption of electronic health records. Am J Manag Care. 2011;17(12 Spec No.):SP117-SP124.

8. Huelsbeck D. Financial constraint and firms’ propensity to accept contractual risk. Los Angeles: Leventhal School of Accounting, USC; 2011.

9. Jha AK, DesRoches CM, Kralovec PD, Joshi MS. A progress report on electronic health records in U.S. hospitals. Health Aff. 2010;29(10).

10. Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. Electronic health record adoption and utilization: 2012 highlights and accomplishments. Washington, DC: 2012.

11. CMS. January 2013 Medicare EHR Incentive Payments. 2013; http://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Legislation/EHRIncentive-Programs/Downloads/Jan_Medicare_EHRIncentivePayments.pdf.

12. GAO. Electronic health records: number and characteristics of providers awarded Medicaid incentive payments for 2011. Washington, DC: 2012.

13. GAO. Electronic health records: number and characteristics of providers awarded Medicare incentive payments for 2011. Washington, DC: 2012.

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