Performance measurement in healthcare means checking how well doctors and hospitals take care of patients. This uses data collected from electronic health records (EHRs), patient surveys, billing systems, and other sources. Accurate data helps healthcare groups compare their results with others, meet rules made by payers like Medicare, and find ways to improve.
Data validity means the data really shows what it is supposed to. Reliability means if the same data were checked again, the results would be the same. Both are needed to trust the results.
Bad data can cause wrong diagnoses, slow treatment, medicine mistakes, and can hurt patients. Also, missing or wrong data makes office work harder and can waste money. Most doctors now use electronic records for patient data. But problems happen because of manual errors, different systems not working well together, and differences in how coding is done.
Healthcare groups must have strong ways to check and keep their data correct. Auditing and certification programs help make sure this happens.
The National Committee for Quality Assurance (NCQA) is important for measuring healthcare quality in the U.S. NCQA runs the Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set (HEDIS), a tool used across the country. HEDIS collects data from over 235 million people in health plans. It measures over 90 things in six areas:
HEDIS uses data from clinical records, claims, and patient surveys. NCQA checks this data by auditing health plans and organizations. These audits look for accuracy, completeness, and following HEDIS rules.
NCQA also offers certification programs. They train and approve groups that collect or audit data to make sure they follow data rules well. Certification helps lower mistakes, reduces bias, and builds trust.
Groups that get NCQA audits and certification show that they are open and responsible. This helps providers compare their results to others and watch changes over time using reports that anyone can see.
Apart from NCQA, groups like URAC give rules to make sure data in healthcare is checked. URAC focuses on protecting patients and keeping them informed by asking for regular monitoring and yearly quality reports.
URAC’s pharmacy accreditation programs need data validation before data is sent in. This includes working with approved outside vendors who audit data by:
The goal is to find mistakes or problems and fix them before data is reported. If the data is not checked well, the group risks losing accreditation.
For health plans, URAC follows audit rules set by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). These audits check if the rules are followed and if the data results can be trusted by regulators, payers, and patients.
Handling data from many sources is common in healthcare now. Health information exchanges, registries, and data aggregators collect big amounts of data for quality reports. To make this data more trustworthy, NCQA has the Data Aggregator Validation program.
This program checks the whole data process, from taking in EHR data to the final reports like HEDIS. The program has three main parts:
When an organization passes, they get certified as Data Partners or Responsible Parties. They can then check original data themselves. This certification means their data can be used for HEDIS reports without being checked again during audits, saving time and money.
For example, Manifest MedEx in California, which is a big nonprofit Health Information Exchange, got 300% more provider participation after completing this program. This shows how the program helps data trust and partnerships.
Healthcare organizations that want reliable performance data must use strong data quality assurance (QA) systems. Data QA makes sure data is accurate, complete, consistent, on time, and valid during its whole life.
Important parts are:
Auditing supports these systems by checking if standards are met. This helps find areas to improve and keeps organizations following rules.
Certification programs make this official by requiring rules to be followed and by giving outside proof of data skills.
Good data quality not only helps healthcare groups measure how well they do, but it also improves patient care. Accurate and timely data helps with:
On the other hand, bad data can cause wrong diagnoses, slow care, broken care coordination, and money problems.
A study by CCD Health shows that bad data causes serious problems, so strong data rules and smart technology are needed to manage data well.
New technology like artificial intelligence (AI) and workflow automation is changing how healthcare keeps data correct and trustworthy. These tools help reduce human mistakes, keep data steady, and speed up data handling.
Some ways AI helps are:
These tools work together with auditing and certification to help healthcare groups manage big and complex data while keeping it accurate and following rules.
Healthcare leaders like medical practice managers, owners, and IT staff in the U.S. must know that keeping data valid and reliable is a constant job that needs teamwork.
To make healthcare performance measurement work well, they should:
By doing these things, healthcare providers and leaders can improve data accuracy, help quality get better, and meet growing demands from regulators, payers, and patients for clearer, trustable results.
Healthcare performance measurement depends on good data. Both validity and reliability matter. Groups like NCQA and URAC use audits and certifications to keep clinical and administrative data trustworthy for measures like HEDIS. Strong data quality systems along with AI and automation technologies help healthcare organizations in the U.S. manage large amounts of data well. This leads to better patient care and smoother operations. Medical practice managers, owners, and IT staff should work with these programs and new technology to succeed in today’s data-focused healthcare system.
HEDIS (Healthcare Effectiveness Data and Information Set) is one of the most widely used performance improvement tools in healthcare, covering over 235 million people. It standardizes how healthcare quality is measured, allowing organizations to track effectiveness, access, and experience of care, thus driving improvements across various healthcare domains.
HEDIS includes more than 90 measures across six domains: Effectiveness of Care, Access/Availability of Care, Experience of Care, Utilization and Risk-Adjusted Utilization, Health Plan Descriptive Information, and Measures Reported Using Electronic Clinical Data Systems.
NCQA collects HEDIS data from health plans and healthcare organizations and conducts audits to ensure validity and reliability, protecting the accuracy of performance results and ensuring trustworthy benchmarking information.
Measurement Certification Programs involve NCQA screening, training, and certifying organizations that collect or audit data for health plans and providers, ensuring standardized and high-quality data collection for benchmarking and performance improvement.
HEDIS promotes accountability by publishing performance data and research findings in multiple forums and formats, enabling stakeholders to access transparent, data-driven insights for decision-making and quality improvement.
Ophthalmology practices can benchmark their clinical and operational performance against standardized, validated measures, identify gaps, and drive improvements by comparing historical and peer data, ultimately enhancing patient care quality and operational efficiency.
HEDIS integrates digital quality measures and Electronic Clinical Data Systems (ECDS) reporting to reduce the burden of data collection, improve timeliness, and enhance accuracy, facilitating real-time performance monitoring and benchmarking.
NCQA offers resources such as the HEDIS Users Group, technical resources, public webinars, and FAQs, providing health plans with tools and knowledge to accurately report, interpret, and improve their HEDIS performance measures.
HEDIS continually updates its measures and reporting approaches, embracing digital transformation to remain useful, valid, and reliable in the changing healthcare landscape, ensuring benchmarks reflect current practices and technologies.
Under CMS contract, NCQA supports implementing the HEDIS Medicare Health Outcomes Survey and its modified version, integrating patient-reported outcomes into performance measurement to provide a more comprehensive view of Medicare population health outcomes.