National Healthcare Quality and Disparities Report
Latest available findings on quality of and access to health care
Data
- Data Infographics
- Data Visualizations
- Data Tools
- Data Innovations
- All-Payer Claims Database
- Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP)
- Medical Expenditure Panel Survey (MEPS)
- AHRQ Quality Indicator Tools for Data Analytics
- State Snapshots
- United States Health Information Knowledgebase (USHIK)
- Data Sources Available from AHRQ
Data Resources
Filter by Topic
- Show all (129)
- Access to Care (4)
- Adverse Events (1)
- Ambulatory (2)
- By Payer (2)
- By State (3)
- Children (3)
- (-) Children (1)
- Children/Adolescents (1)
- (-) Clinicians (1)
- Community Pharmacies (1)
- Costs (2)
- Costs & Charges (1)
- Coverage (4)
- Data (3)
- Discharges by State (1)
- Disparities (2)
- Elderly (1)
- Element Definitions, Values & Information Models (1)
- Emergency Departments (4)
- Employer (1)
- Estimates (State & Metro) (1)
- (-) Expenditures & Projections (3)
- Health (5)
- Health Care (8)
- Health Conditions (5)
- Health Plans (3)
- Health Systems (1)
- Hospital Characteristics (2)
- Hospitalizations (10)
- (-) Household Spending (1)
- Injuries Seen (1)
- Inpatient Care (1)
- (-) Insurance (9)
- Medicaid (1)
- Medicare (1)
- Men (1)
- Mental Health (3)
- Mental Health and Substance Abuse Disorders (2)
- Obesity (1)
- Opioids (1)
- Patient Experience (1)
- Payment Sources (1)
- Premiums (1)
- Prescription Drugs (1)
- Preventable (1)
- Private (1)
- Quality (3)
- (-) Readmissions (2)
- Safety Culture (1)
- SCHIP (1)
- Spending (2)
- State (1)
- Surgery (3)
- Systematic Review (1)
- Systems - Characteristics (1)
- Uninsured (2)
- Use (3)
- Visits (2)
- Women (2)
Data Resources
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) offers practical, research-based tools and other resources to help a variety of health care organizations, providers and others make care safer in all health care settings.
Results
1-10 of 14 Resources displayedThe CAHPS Database (formerly known as the National CAHPS Benchmarking Database) is the repository for data from selected CAHPS surveys. The primary purpose of the CAHPS Database is to facilitate comparisons of CAHPS survey results by and among survey users. To support the use of CAHPS survey results, the CAHPS Database offers products and services that include comparative benchmark results, custom analyses, and data for research purposes. Participation in the CAHPS Database is free and open to all survey users.
These HCUP Statistical Briefs provide statistics on hospital costs and use in the United States focused on specific types of insurers or payers—Medicaid, Medicare, and private insurance.
These HCUP Statistical Briefs provide statistics about readmissions to U.S. hospitals, including readmissions involving specific conditions (diagnoses) and procedures.
These HCUP Statistical Briefs provide statistics on hospital costs and use in the United States focused on the uninsured population.
The MEPS Household Component fields questionnaires to individual household members to collect nationally representative data on demographic characteristics, health conditions, health status, use of medical care services, charges and payments, access to care, satisfaction with care, health insurance coverage, income, and employment.
The MEPS Insurance Component fields questionnaires to private and public sector employers to collect data on the number and types of private health insurance plans offered, benefits associated with these plans, annual premiums, annual contributions by employers and employees, eligibility requirements, and employer characteristics.
Using the age and the insurance coverage variables from the MEPS allows for analysis of children's health insurance coverage. MEPS also collects data on coverage provided by the State Children's Health Insurance Program.
Projected household expenditure data from the 2002 MEPS Household Component file aligned with the 2002 National Health Expenditure Accounts (NHEA). Projected expenditures are calculated in a two-step process. First, core data from the 2002 NHEA-aligned MEPS file are projected to each end year through 2016 by adjusting MEPS person weights with Census projections for population totals, fertility and mortality over time. Then, the re-weighted NHEA-aligned MEPS expenditures are calibrated annually by type of service and source of payment categories so that growth in the re-weighted NHEA-aligned MEPS expenditures matches growth in the projected NHEA. Users should be aware that these estimates are surrounded by uncertainty from a wide variety of sources.
Health care costs (both charges and payments) are collected for all persons for each medical event they experience in the year, including the amount from each payment source. Charges are the dollar amounts asked ("charge") for a service by a health care provider. This is often different from the actual payments made to providers. Expenditure estimates are based on payments, not charges. More specifically, expenditures in MEPS are comprised of direct payments for care provided during the year, including out-of-pocket payments and payments by private insurance, Medicaid, Medicare, and other sources. In addition to the tables, query tool, and publications below, person-level and event-level data files with health care expenditure variables can be downloaded for analysis.
Health insurance coverage of the U.S. population by person and family-level characteristics is collected through the MEPS Household Component. Job-based health insurance coverage offered by employers is collected through the MEPS Insurance Component.