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Promoting Health Data Standards With Public Health at the Table. HL7 Trimester Meeting Government Project Special Interest Group September 13, 2000 Suzie Burke-Bebee, NCHS Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Presentation Agenda. The case for Data Standards
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Promoting Health Data Standards With Public Health at the Table HL7 Trimester Meeting Government Project Special Interest Group September 13, 2000 Suzie Burke-Bebee, NCHS Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
Presentation Agenda • The case for Data Standards • Importance of HIPAA to Public Health and Health Services Research • Establishment of Public Health Data Standards Consortium • Consortium accomplishments 1999-2000 • Consortium Work Plan • Early lessons learned
The Vision • Enhancing the comparability, quality and integrity of health information from a wide variety of public and private sources - at the local, national and international levels - through more uniform data policies and standards
What Data Standards? • Uniform or core data sets • Standard Certificates for Deaths, Live Births and Fetal Deaths • Uniform Hospital Discharge Data Set (UHDDS) • Uniform Ambulatory Care Data Set (UACDS) • Long-term care data sets • Core Health Data Elements (1996) • CIPHER
What Data Standards? • Classifications and Terminologies • International Classification of Diseases (ICD) • International Classification of Impairments, Disabilities and Handicaps (ICIDH) • International Classification of Primary Care • Procedure classifications (e.g., ICD, CPT-4) • Systematized Nomenclature of Human and Veterinary Medicine (SNOMED) • Unified Medical Language System (UMLS)
Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA)
Utility of Information for Public Health and Research • Reimbursement • Reimbursement • Risk Adjustment • Quality Assessment • Performance Measurement • Outcomes Research • Monitor Health Status, Access and Utilization • Public Health Surveillance
Current Public Health Electronic Standards Activities • Data Elements for Emergency Departments (DEEDS) • Immunization messages and registries • Laboratory findings on communicable diseases • Standards for reporting Notifiable Diseases • Electronic birth and death registration
Implications for Public Health and Research • Take advantage of standardization • Comply with standards to reduce provider burden and improve comparability of data • Influence evolution of standards to meet needs • Seize opportunity for enhanced information capabilities • Address challenges to data access
HIPAA Workshop: Implications for Public Health and Health Services Research • Held November 2-3, 1998 • Sponsored by NCHS and CDC in conjunction with AHRQ and NCVHS • Attended by 85 organizational representatives
Consensus Recommendation: Develop Public Health and Health Services Research CONSORTIUM • Convene organizations around data standards issues Identify high priority data needs • Seek formal representation on data content committees (NUBC, NUCC)
Consensus Recommendation: Develop Public Health and Health Services Research CONSORTIUM • Organize representation on standards development bodies (ANSI ASC X12 and HL-7) • Educate public health and research communities about data standards issues • Participate in efforts to assure continued access to information
Public Health Data StandardsConsortiumScope of Data Interests • HIPAA claims-related data • Birth and death data • Disease registry and surveillance data • Birth defects data • Laboratory data • ETC.
Follow-up to HIPAA Workshop • Established Consortium Listserv to facilitate communication among members and with the public • Send e-mail to LISTSERV@LIST.NIH.GOV with the following text in the message body: SUBSCRIBE PH-CONSORTIUM-L YOUR NAME • Established web presence: www.cdc.gov/nchs/otheract/phdsc/phdsc. htm
Follow-up to HIPAA Workshop • First meeting of consortium convened on January 24 -25, 1999 at NAHDO meeting • Approximately 45-50 participants • Identified organizations to participate in a steering committee - NCHS/CDC, AHRQ, HCFA, NCVHS, NAHDO, NAPHSIS, CSTE, ASTHO, AHSR, NACCHO, AMCHP, APHL, State Medicaid Directors, cancer registries, mental health
January 1999 Meeting Discussed Next Steps • Agreed on need for a federal and state representative on National Uniform Billing Committee (NUBC) and National Uniform Claim Committee (NUCC) • Decided to test consensus process with consideration on listserv of two new data elements for the claim - race and ethnicity of patient and, for newborn claims, mother’s medical record number
Consortium Progress • Business cases developed for collection of 1) race and ethnicity and 2) mother’s medical record number on claim/encounter • Active discussion took place on the list serv • Discussion on race and ethnicity contributed to a panel presentation at June 1999 NCVHS meeting and to HHS Data Council proposal to ANSI ASC X12 in Feb. 2000
Consortium Progress • At February 2000 X12 meeting, 837 Work Group approved Department request to change 4031 Institutional Implementation Guide to allow collection of race/ethnicity on claim. • At June 2000 X12 meeting, 837 Work Group, Healthcare Task Group and X12N Insurance Subcommittee all approved Consortium request to add Mother’s Medical Record Number to the 837 Standard.
Consortium Progress • NUBC and NUCC both approved two Consortium representatives for membership • NUBC: Bob Davis (NY) State perspective and Marjorie Greenberg (NCHS) Federal perspective • NUCC: Walter Suarez (MN) State perspective and Denise Koo (CDC) Federal perspective
Consortium Progress • Organized representation at trimester meetings of Standards Development Organizations • Consortium reports on activities at HL-7 through Government Special Interest Group • Public Health Caucus held first meeting at ANSI ASC X12 on June 5, 2000
Consortium Progress • Contract was awarded to NAHDO to identify and characterize public health and research data needs for State encounter data sets, building on HCUP survey • Sponsored with NAHDO an educational teleconference on December 7, 1999 • Consortium members have made presentations at a variety of national and regional conferences
Consortium Steering Committee Held Meeting on March 21, 2000 • 45 individuals representing a broad range of organizations participated in a meeting of the Consortium Steering Committee on March 21, 2000
Objectives of March 21, 2000Steering Committee Meeting • To receive and discuss presentation from NAHDO on results of its study • To prioritize data needs identified by NAHDO and develop work plan • To solidify Consortium organizational structure
Outcomes of March 21Steering Committee Meeting • Organizations were asked to affirm membership on Steering Committee by naming a principal and alternate member (approximately 20 organizations have done this, including, NCHS/CDC, CDC, AHRQ, HCFA, SAMHSA, AHSR, APHL, ASTHO, CSTE, NACCHO, NAPHSIS, NAHDO,) • Established a Planning Group to perform administrative functions of Consortium
Outcomes of March 21Steering Committee Meeting • Established a Standing Work Group on Education • Prioritized data elements identified in NAHDO Study • Solicited members for ad hoc work groups to address high priority data elements and develop recommendations for inclusion or expansion in the HIPAA standard
Outcomes of March 21Steering Committee Meeting • Ad hoc Work Groups: • External Cause-of Injury Codes • Payer Type • Mother’s Medical Record Number • Readmission and Individual Identifier • Source of Admission • Functional Status
Education Work Group • Held two conference calls • Established Charter with Goals to: • Develop and implement an educational strategy that includes evaluation and feedback • Formulate a plan for developing and delivering educational messages and materials • Communicate work products and accomplishments of ad hoc work groups
E-code Work Group • Held three conference calls • Review “business case” developed by NAHDO for standardizing and expanding E-code collection in claim transaction • Provide additional documentation on current practice, other recommendations • Recommend next steps
Payer Type Work Group • Held one conference call • Identified public health need for standard coding scheme (e.g., distinguish between managed care and fee-for-service) • Identified inadequacies of X12 code set • Considered potential of HIPAA PlanID • Agreed on process for developing public health-focused Payer Type code set
Early Lessons Learned • Need for education on HIPAA and data standards within the public health and research communities is considerable • Response to Consortium concept has been very positive • Partnership between federal and state levels is key • There is strength in numbers
Early Lessons Learned • Standards Development Organizations and Data Content Committees would like Public Health and Research to speak to them with one voice!
Contacts for more information about the Consortium • Marjorie Greenberg msg1@cdc.gov • Denise Koo dxk1@cdc.gov • Suzie Burke-Bebee zxj6@cdc.gov • Bob Davis rad01@health.state.ny.us • Walter Suarez Walter.Suarez@mhdi.org
Resources • http://www.ncvhs.hhs.gov • http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/otheract/phdsc/phdsc.htm • http://aspe.os.dhhs.gov/admnsimp • http://www.wpc-edi.com/hipaa • http://www.hl7.org • http://www.ansi.org