The Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) (Text Version) Slide presentation from the AHRQ 2008 conference showcasing Agency research and projects. Slide Presentation from the AHRQ 2008 Annual ConferenceOn September 10, 2008, Anne Elixhauser, made this presentation at the 2008 Annual Conference. Select to access the PowerPoint® presentation (7 MB; Plugin Software Help).Slide 1The Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP)September 10, 2008Anne Elixhauser, Ph.D.Senior Research Scientist.Slide 2Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP)The Largest Collection of Multi-Year, All-Payer, Encounter-Level, Health Care Data.Slide 3The HCUP Partnership: A Voluntary Federal-State-Private Sector CollaborationThe slide includes a map of the United States with different colors used to indicate States' participation in HCUP.10 States are nonparticipating.8 States are partners providing inpatient data only.6 States are partners providing inpatient and ambulatory surgery data.3 States are partners providing inpatient and emergency department data.Remaining States are partners providing inpatient, ambulatory surgery, and emergency department data.39 States 90% of all discharges.Slide 4The Making of HCUP DataThe slide includes a flow chart with the following elements: Patient enters hospital (photo of patient in bed).Billing record created (image of hospital form).Hospital sends billing data and any additional data elements to Data Organizations (photo of person in laboratory coat using computer).States store data in varying formats (image of U.S.A. map).AHRQ standardizes data to create uniform HCUP databases (image of HCUP logo).Slide 5What is HCUP? And what is it not?Slide includes table with the following information:HCUP is: Discharge database for health care encounters.All payer, including the uninsured.Hospital, ambulatory surgery, emergency department data.All hospital discharges.Accessible multiple ways: raw data, regular reports, on-line.HCUP is not: A survey.Specific to a single payer, e.g. Medicare.Outpatient visits, pharmacy, laboratory.A sample.Just another database.Slide 6HCUP Is a Family of Databases, Tools, and ProductsSlide includes a flow chart with several arrows leading from the logo of HCUP directly to each of the following elements: HCUP database (image of cylinder).Research publications (image of scientific article).User support (photo of person in laboratory coat using a computer).Software and research tools (image of computer disk).Slide 7HCUP Supports High Impact Health Services, Policy, and Clinical ResearchSlide includes banners and logos for various scientific and news reporting publications.Slide 8HCUP Supports Federal and Non-Federal InitiativesSlide includes logos of various government agencies, organizations, and associations.Slide 9Types of HCUP DatabasesSlide includes a U.S.A. map with the following text superimposed on it. State Inpatient Databases (SID). Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS).Kids' Inpatient Database (KID).State Ambulatory Surgery Databases (SASD).State Emergency Department Databases (SEDD). Nationwide Emergency Department Sample (NEDS).Slide 10Purpose of the SIDAllows state-level analysis of inpatient hospital utilization using one more States in a uniform format.Slide 11States Releasing SID through HCUP Central Distributor1990-2006*ArizonaCalifornia**ColoradoFloridaHawaiiIowaKentuckyMarylandMassachusettsMichiganNebraskaNevadaNew JerseyNew YorkNorth CarolinaOregonRhode IslandSouth CarolinaUtahVermontWashingtonWest VirginiaWisconsin* Not all States participate in all years.** Special application process.Slide 12The SID Supports Interesting Research TopicsEnumeration of all hospitals and discharges within market areas or States.Investigation of questions unique to one state.Comparison of data from two or more States.Research of market areas or small area variation analyses.Identification of state-specific trends in inpatient care utilization, access, charges, and outcomes.Slide 13Purpose of the NISAllows national and regional studies of inpatient hospital utilization ** Not recommended for state-level analyses.Slide 14The NIS Is a Stratified Sample of Hospitals from the SIDSlide includes the following elements:2006 State Inpatient Databases. N = 3,958 hospitals.32,114,909 records.5 NIS Strata (State is NOT included as a stratum) U.S. Region.Urban/rural.Teaching status.Ownership/control.Bed size.Stratified sample of hospitals (image of arrow pointing from NIS Strata to next element).2006 Nationwide Inpatient Sample. N = 1,045 hospitals.8,074,825 records.Slide 15Statewide Data Systems Participating in NISSlide includes a table indicating which States started participating between the years of 1988-2006.8 participating States in 1988.38 participating States in 2006.Slide 16The NIS Can Be Used to Study Many TopicsUse of and charges for hospital services.Medical practice variation.Medical treatment effectiveness.Quality of care and patient safety.Impact of health policy changes.Diffusion of medical technology.Slide 17Purpose of the KIDAllows national and regional studies of inpatient hospital utilization and charges for children and adolescents.Designed for study of rare pediatric conditions.Slide 18The KID Is a Stratified Sample of Discharges from the SIDSlide includes a flow chart with the following elements:2006 State Inpatient Databases. N = x.Pediatric Discharges from x Hospitals.3 Strata. Uncomplicated births.Complicated births.Pediatric non-births.10% stratified sample of uncomplicated births (image of arrow leading from strata to 2006 Kids' Inpatient Database).80% stratified sample of other ped discharges (image of arrow leading from strata to 2006 Kids' Inpatient Database).2006 Kids' Inpatient Database. N = x.Pediatric Discharges from x Hospitals.Slide 19Key Differences Between the 1997, 2000, 2003, and 2006 KIDSlide includes a table comparing the statistical growth during these years for the following items:# HCUP States (22 in 1997; 38 in 2006).# Hospitals (2,521 in 1997; 3,739 in 2006).# Unweighted records (1.9 million in 1997; 3.1 million in 2006).# Weighted discharges (6.7 million in 1997; 7.6 million in 2006).Slide 20What Is the Source for the SASD?Ambulatory surgery data:Designated hospital beds; separate facilities with hospital affiliation included.Some data from free-standing centers.Data organizations provides data to HCUP—collection varies by state.HCUP collects and standardizes data to create SASD.Slide 21States with HCUP Ambulatory Surgery DatabasesCalifornia**Colorado*ConnecticutFlorida*GeorgiaIndianaIowa*KansasKentucky*MaineMaryland*Michigan*MinnesotaMissouriNebraska*New HampshireNew Jersey*New York*North Carolina*OhioOklahomaSouth Carolina*South DakotaTennesseeUtah*Vermont*Wisconsin**Data available through the HCUP Central Distributor.** Special application process.Note: Not all States participate in all years.Slide 22What is the Source for the SEDD?Emergency department data: uniform billing data (UB-92), plus additional data elements, from hospital-affiliated emergency department sites.Data organization provides data to HCUP.HCUP collects and standardizes data to create SEDD.Slide 23The SEDD Can Provide a More Complete Picture of CareThe SID and the SEDD can be combined to get a full picture of care that began in the ED.Slide 24States with HCUP Emergency Department DatabasesArizona*California*ConnecticutFlorida*GeorgiaHawaii*IndianaIowa*KansasMaineMaryland*Massachusetts*MinnesotaMissouriNebraska*New HampshireNew Jersey*New YorkOhioSouth Carolina*South DakotaTennesseeUtah*Vermont*Wisconsin**Data available through the HCUP Central Distributor.** Special application process.Note: Not all States participate in all years.Slide 25Some Interesting Ways to Use the SEDD for ResearchInjury surveillance.Trends in emergency department (ED) use.Correlations between ED use and environmental events.Emerging infectious diseases.Occurrence of non-fatal, preventable illness.ED visits and re-visits for some States.Slide 26Coming Soon...Slide includes a photo of an ambulance with the following text superimposed on it: Nationwide Emergency Department Sample (NEDS).Slide 27HCUP ED DataSlide includes a flow chart with arrows from both SEDD (treat-and-release ED visits) and SID (admitted ED visits) to NEDS.About 84% of ED visits are treat-and-release.About 16% of ED visits result in a hospital stay.Slide 28NEDS Benchmarks WellComparable to other ED sources.Consistent in terms of total ED visits.Higher percent of inpatient admissions with ED source.Larger amount of diagnostic and procedure information available.Similar for injury rates.Slide 29Administrative Data Have Benefits and LimitationsBenefits: Large sample size.Uniformity of coding.Routine, regular collection.Ease of access.All-payer.Available at local, state, regional, national level.Limitations: Differences in coding across hospitals.No data on individuals outside of hospital system.May not show complete episode of care.May not include all hospitals.Lack revenue information.Sparse clinical details.Slide 30Pricing InformationNational Databases (NIS, KID). $200 per data year (from CY2000 forward).$20 student price.State Databases (SID, SASD, SEDD). $20 - $3,000 per data year (varies by state).Slide 31HCUP Statistical BriefsSlide includes images of HCUP Statistical Brief #42 on The National Hospital Bill.Slide 32Other Statistical Briefs Include:Hospital stays related to depression.Trends in risk-adjusted mortality.Trends in preventable hospitalizations.Infections with Clostridium difficile.Childbirth-related stays.Adverse drug events.Admissions for traumatic brain injury.Bariatric surgery utilization and outcomes.Circumcisions..Slide 33HCUPnetSlide includes an image of the HCUPnet Web site with the following text superimposed on it:HCUPnet is a powerful online query tool that gives you free, instant access to healthcare statistics.HCUPnet provides national information on hospital stays based on the Nationwide Inpatient Sample.Slide 34HCUPnetSlide includes an image of a different page on the HCUPnet Web site with this text superimposed on it:And it gives access to data from participating States from HCUP's State Inpatient Databases.Slide 35HCUPnetSlide includes an image of a different page on the HCUPnet Web site with this text superimposed on it:HCUPnet takes you through a step-by-step process to select the information you want.Slide 36HCUPnetSlide includes an image of a different page on the HCUPnet Web site with this text superimposed on it:HCUPnet provides information on: Numbers of discharges.Hospital LOS and charges.Discharge status.How patients were admitted.Slide 37HCUPnetSlide includes an image of a different page on the HCUPnet Web site with this text superimposed on it:Are you interested in particular patient groups? Specific hospital characteristics?Slide 38HCUPnetSlide includes an image of a different page on the HCUPnet Web site with this text superimposed on it:You get your results instantly.HCUPnet is based on aggregated statistics to speed data transfer and protect patient confidentiality.Slide 39HCUPnetSlide includes an image of a different page on the HCUPnet Web site with this text superimposed on it:You can request information on trends for the nation and for any participating state.Slide 40HCUPnetSlide includes an image of a different page on the HCUPnet Web site with this text superimposed on it:Visit HCUPnet at: http://hcupnet.ahrq.govSlide 41New Interactive On-line HCUP Overview Course AvailableSlide includes an image of the HCUP Web site.http://www.hcup-us.ahrq.gov/overviewcourse.jspSlide 42Join the HCUP E-mail ListSlide includes an image of the HCUP Web site.HCUP newsletter.New data releases.New Reports.http://www.ahrq.gov/data/hcup/hcuplist.htmSlide 43Using HCUP Technical AssistanceSlide includes a photo of a person wearing a laboratory coat and using a computer.Active Technical Assistance: Responds to inquiries about HCUP data, products, and tools.Collects user feedback and suggestions for improvement.E-mail: hcup@ahrq.govPhone: (866) 290-HCUP Current as of February 2009 Internet Citation: The Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) (Text Version). February 2009. Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality, Rockville, MD. http://www.ahrq.gov/news/events/conference/2008/Elixhauser2.html