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22
May, 2013
Wednesday

More Than Four In Five Office-Based Physicians Could Qualify For Federal Electronic Health Record Incentives

Abstract

Our analyses of federal survey data show that more than four in five office-based physicians could qualify for new federal incentive payments to encourage the adoption and “meaningful use” of electronic health records, based on the numbers of Medicare or Medicaid patients they see. The incentives are thus likely to accelerate the spread of electronic health records. However, our analyses also indicate that eligibility for the incentives is likely to vary by specialty: 90.6 percent of physicians working in general or family practice or internal medicine could qualify for incentives, but fewer than two-thirds of pediatricians, obstetrician-gynecologists, and psychiatrists may qualify. Eligibility and use will also vary by factors such as size and type of practice; physicians in solo practice are much less likely to use electronic health records than physicians in other practice settings. We suggest actions that policy makers can take to lessen disparities and increase the adoption and meaningful use of electronic health records.

Bruen BK, Ku L, Burke MF, Buntin MB. More Than Four In Five Office-Based Physicians Could Qualify For Federal Electronic Health Record Incentives. Health Affairs. 2011 Mar 1;30(3):472-80.

8 March 2011

Bibliographic Data

Title:

More Than Four In Five Office-Based Physicians Could Qualify For Federal Electronic Health Record Incentives

Author(s):

Bruen, Brian K.; Ku, Leighton; Burke, Matthew F.; Buntin, Melinda J. Beeuwkes

Journal

Health Affairs, 30(3), pp. 472-480
(2011-03-01)

URL:

Abstract

DOI:

10.1377/hlthaff.2010.0932

PMID:

21383366

Keyword(s):

Electronic Health Records, Health Information Technology, Incentives, Meaningful Use, United States

Citation:
Bruen BK, Ku L, Burke MF, Buntin MB. More Than Four In Five Office-Based Physicians Could Qualify For Federal Electronic Health Record Incentives. Health Affairs. 2011 Mar 1;30(3):472-80.

Other Publications

In ICMCC Database

All Health Affairs articles (97).

Other article(s) by
Matthew F. Burke (1).

Other article(s) by
Melinda J. Beeuwkes Buntin (2).

Discussion