0920-0212_Statement A_07.01.2021

0920-0212_Statement A_07.01.2021.docx

National Hospital Care Survey

OMB: 0920-0212

Document [docx]
Download: docx | pdf





Supporting Statement A for Request for Clearance:



National Hospital Care Survey


OMB No. 0920-0212

(Expiration Date (3/31/2022)


Contact Information:


Geoffrey Jackson, MS

Team Lead

Hospital Care Team

Ambulatory and Hospital Care Statistics Branch

Division of Health Care Statistics

National Center for Health Statistics/CDC

3311 Toledo Road

Hyattsville, MD 20782

301-458-4703

301-458-4032 (fax)

[email protected]



June 28, 2021















List of Attachments:


Attachment A: Authorizing Legislative

Attachment B: 60-Day Federal Register Notice

Attachment C: Annual Hospital Interview

Attachment D: Introductory Letter to Hospitals

Attachment E: NHCS Overview Flyer

Attachment F: Currently Approved List of UB-04 Elements

Attachment G: Electronic Health Record (EHR) Variable List

Attachment H: Ethics Review Board (ERB) Approval Notice for the NHCS

Attachment I: Initial Hospital Intake Questionnaire

Attachment J: Recruitment Survey Presentation

Attachment K: Monthly Transmission of UB-04 Data

Attachment L: Quarterly Transmission of EHR Data

Attachment M: Confidentiality Letter


SUPPORTING STATEMENT

THE NATIONAL HOSPITAL CARE SURVEY


Shape1

  • The goal of the National Hospital Care Survey (NHCS) is to assess the health of the population through the creation of a dataset that contains information on health care utilization as well as the demographic characteristics, medical conditions, and treatment of patients who use hospitals for inpatient and ambulatory medical care in the United States.

  • The intended use of the resulting data is to provide government, professional, scientific, academic and commercial institutions, and private research organizations, as well as private citizens with information that can be used to monitor public health and to investigate research questions about health care utilization and delivery over time. 

  • Inpatient and ambulatory data will be collected from a sample of 608 hospitals via Uniform Billing (UB)-04 administrative claims or electronic health record (EHR) data. Additionally, hospital-level characteristics for all sampled hospitals are gathered through an Annual Hospital Interview.   

  • The target subpopulation of the NHCS is inpatient discharges, and patient visits made to Emergency Departments (EDs) and Outpatient Departments (OPDs) of non-Federal, non-institutional hospitals with six or more beds staffed for inpatient use in the 50 states and the District of Columbia.

  • NHCS data will be weighted and analyzed using appropriate statistical techniques. Public use files will be made available where possible. Findings will be released in NCHS reports, journal articles, and research papers as well as released to researchers for analysis.


The National Center for Health Statistics (NCHS), Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), requests a three-year approval for a revision to continue the National Hospital Care Survey (NHCS) (OMB No. 0920-0212, expires 03/31/2022). There are no changes to the data collection survey. The only change is to the burden hours due to the increase of the sample size.


On March 5, 2019, the NHCS received a 3-year clearance to continue the NHCS data collection. The terms of clearance state that “NCHS will continue to update OMB regularly regarding challenges with and progress toward recruiting hospitals and their ability to efficiently transfer data to NCHS, as well as its progress on developing the sampling frame for free standing ambulatory care facilities.” To encourage hospitals to participate in survey and increase recruitment NCHS has held regularly scheduled presentations on aspects of the survey to sampled hospitals. To reduce participation burden on hospitals, NCHS has explored alternative data sources, including identifying data collection organizations to obtain data either through already existing data collection agreements or through the development of new third-party relationships. The National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey (NHAMCS) will continue concurrently with NHCS until enough hospitals are recruited to produce reliable national estimates.


Activities requested for approval:


  • Continue recruitment of hospitals in the sample for the NHCS.

  • Continue the collection of hospital-level data through an initial intake questionnaire and an Annual Hospital Interview (including COVID-19 questions added in the 2020 collection) for all sampled hospitals.

  • Continue the collection of electronic data on inpatient discharges as well as Emergency Department (ED) and Outpatient Department (OPD) visits through the collection of Electronic Health Record (EHR) data or Uniform Billing (UB)-04 administrative claims.

  • Continue collection of substance-involved ED visit data through the ED component.

  • Postpone frame development for free-standing ambulatory care facilities.

  • Continue to make relatively minor additions, deletions, and changes to the survey using non-substantive change submissions.



  1. Justification


  1. Circumstances Making the Collection of Information Necessary


Background


The National Hospital Discharge Survey (NHDS) (OMB No. 0920-0212, Exp. Date 01/31/2019), conducted continuously between 1965 and 2010, was the Nation’s principal source of data on inpatient utilization of short-stay, non-institutional, non-Federal hospitals, and was the principal source of nationally representative estimates on the characteristics of inpatients including lengths of stay, diagnoses, surgical and non-surgical procedures, and patterns of use of care in hospitals in various regions of the country. In 2011, NHDS was granted approval by OMB to expand its content and to change its name to the National Hospital Care Survey (NHCS).



Inpatient Component of NHCS


In May 2011 recruitment of sampled hospitals for the NHCS began. Hospitals in the NHCS are asked to provide data on all inpatients from their UB-04 administrative claims, or EHRs. Hospital-level characteristics and data on the impact of COVID-19 on the hospital are collected through an Annual Hospital Interview (Attachment C). NHCS will continue to provide the same national health-care statistics on hospitals that NHDS provided.


Additionally, NHCS collects more information at the hospital level (e.g., volume of care provided by the hospital), which allow for analyses on the effect of hospital characteristics on the quality of care provided. NHCS data collected from UB-04 administrative claims and EHRs include all inpatient discharges, not just a sample. The confidential collection of personally identifiable information (PII) allows NCHS to link episodes of care provided to the same patient in the ED and/or OPD and as an inpatient, as well as link patients to the National Death Index (NDI) to measure post-discharge mortality, and Medicare and Medicaid data to leverage comorbidities. The availability of patient identifiers also makes analysis on hospital readmissions possible. This comprehensive collection of data makes future opportunities for surveillance possible, including analyzing trends and incidence of opioid misuse, acute myocardial infarction, heart failure and stroke, as well as trends and point prevalence of health care acquired infections and antimicrobial use.


Ambulatory Component of NHCS


Beginning in 2013, in addition to inpatient hospital data, hospitals participating in NHCS were asked to provide data on the utilization of health care services in their ambulatory settings (e.g., EDs and OPDs). Due to low response rates and high level of missing data, OPD data were not collected in the last approval period (2019, 2020 and 2021). Collection of OPD may resume in future years.


The NHCS offers unique opportunities to study opioid-involved health outcomes, as the ED component of the survey supports identification of substance-involved ED visits. NHCS can link a patient’s care history to internal (e.g., across ambulatory and inpatient settings of participating hospitals and time) and external data (e.g., NDI). Repeat encounters for opioid use can be examined and opioid-related mortality rates can be calculated. Also, the collection of clinical notes via EHR provides rich information on the type of drugs taken, the nature of misuse or poisoning, and other risk factors for opioid-involved hospital encounters. The additional information on drug use in the EHR data has been used to enhance the identification of opioid-involved and opioid overdose hospital encounters. These estimates will be used to monitor trends in major substances of abuse (e.g., heroin, cocaine, marijuana) and to assess alcohol use by minors that result in ED visits. The notes can logically be extended to any medical condition, enriching the main data elements collected.


Data on substance-involved ED visits from NHCS will be used by national, state, and local health professionals, policymakers, law enforcement officers, pharmacologists, and health services researchers to understand the consequences of substance use and abuse and to identify emerging trends and changing patterns of substance use.


  1. Purpose and Use of Information Collection


NHCS has several objectives. The first objective is to produce nationally representative utilization statistics for hospital discharges and ambulatory health care. NHCS uses an independent national probability sample of hospitals that is updated every third year to ensure that the sample continues to be nationally representative. Once fully implemented, the survey will produce nationally representative estimates of discharges by diagnosis and procedures and visits to EDs and OPDs.


A second objective is to close gaps in available information about hospitals at the facility level and to relate these characteristics to discharge level data within the hospital. The NHCS collects data using an Annual Hospital Interview from every sampled hospital (including nonrespondents) each year (Attachment C).


A third objective is to link episodes of care within the hospital, such as for patients seen in the ED and subsequently admitted as inpatients. NHCS collects patient PII which allows linkages to other episodes of care in the ED and OPD as well as other data sources, such as the NDI and the Medicare and Medicaid claims databases.


A fourth objective is to produce micro-data public use files of non-identifiable data from inpatient discharges and ED and OPD visits and to disseminate timely data that can be used by health policy researchers, the public and the research community. Using these data files, researchers can study trends and changes in health care practice, conformance to scientific evidence about effectiveness, and changes in patterns of health care seeking behavior. It complements patient-based and population-based information.


Data collected will be used by government, professional, scientific, academic and commercial institutions, private research organizations, and private citizens. The NHCS is designed to produce yearly national estimates on hospital utilization while adding new utility to the data by enabling NCHS to link cases and outcomes both across departments within a hospital and with external data sets. This rich dataset contains information on the demographic characteristics, medical conditions, and treatment of patients who use hospitals for inpatient and ambulatory medical care. The data NHCS is collecting can be used to investigate a wide range of public health and health services related issues over time rather than focusing on a single specific research question at a single point in time.


Of particular importance is the role NHCS has played in contributing its trend data on hospitalizations related to COVID-19. In the midst of a COVID-19 pandemic, NCHS staff have demonstrated the robust analytic capability of the survey through the production of a COVID-19 Hospital Dashboard (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/covid19/nhcs.htm). The data in the dashboard are from approximately 50 hospitals submitting inpatient and ED Uniform Bill (UB)-04 administrative claims from March 18, 2020 through December 31, 2021. Even though the data are not nationally representative, they can provide insight on the impact of COVID-19 on various types of hospitals throughout the country. The NHCS data from these hospitals show results by a combination of indicators related to COVID-19, such as length of inpatient stay, in-hospital mortality, comorbidities, and intubation or ventilator use. NHCS data allow for reporting on patient conditions and treatments within the hospital over time. This information is not available in other hospital reporting systems.


Although not yet nationally representative, organizations outside of CDC deem NHCS data as valuable. For example, the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Trust Fund (PCORTF) has provided NCHS with funds for three projects in fiscal years (FY) 2017, 2018, and 2019, which have helped NCHS expand the analytic capability of NHCS data.


The first project funded by PCORTF added cause-specific mortality to NHCS by linking to the National Death Index (NDI). The goal of this project was to link the NHCS to the NDI and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Medicare Master Beneficiary Summary File (MBSF). The project produced three data files for the RDC: 2014 NHCS Data Linked to 2014/2015 NDI; 2016 NHCS Data Linked to 2016/2017 NDI; and 2014 NHCS Data Linked to 2014/2015 Medicare MBSF. The linked NDI files provide information on post-acute mortality and cause of death. Linkage of NHCS data with the CMS Medicare Data provides the opportunity to conduct a vast array of studies on health care utilization and expenditures among the elderly U.S. population and persons receiving Medicare disability benefits.


The second PCORTF project funded aimed to enhance the identification of opioid-involved health outcomes (in ED visits) using linked hospital care and mortality data. The project completed two main tasks: (1) It added information from the Drug-Involved Mortality (DIM) file to the linked 2014 and 2016 NHCS/NDI data, and (2) the study developed methods of enhanced opioid-identification in hospital and death certificate data and added results from the enhanced opioid identification algorithm to the linked 2016 NHCS/NDI/DIM file. The DIM file provides information on specific drugs, drug classes, and non-specific references to drugs mentioned in the literal text on the death certificate. The enhanced opioid-identification algorithm utilizes all structured and unstructured data collected in the UB-04 administrative claims and EHR data to improve the identification of opioid-involved and opioid overdose hospital encounters. Both data files are available in the NCHS RDC.


The third PCORTF-funded project aimed to identify co-occurring disorders among opioid users using linked hospital care and mortality data. The project served as a culmination of the second project and aimed to improve data on co-occurring substance use disorders and selected mental health issues (anxiety and depressive disorders). The project involved conducting a study to validate algorithms to identify the use of opioids and the existence of co-occurring disorders, followed by an abstraction of 100 encounters from 9 hospitals participating in NHCS to validate the performance of the enhanced opioid-identification and co-occurring disorder algorithms. Recruitment for this validation study began in January 2021.


The NHCS data are important because they define an approach that links structure, process, and outcomes of care. Structural information (i.e., information on the hospital and environment in which care is received) provided on the Annual Hospital Interview can be linked with clinical care processes (e.g., surgeries) to understand how structure affects the types of care. Data from the survey can be used to examine the extent to which the process, such as earlier discharge, places a patient at risk for desirable or undesirable outcomes, such as unanticipated (i.e., non-elective) readmission to the hospital. This is only possible because patient PII data allows, in some circumstances, the linking of characteristics and processes of one admission/visit with a later admission/visit and the location of the admission/visit (i.e., inpatient, ED) with later care received through the UB-04 claims or EHR data.


The Institute of Medicine has included equity among the six key properties or domains of quality1. Equitable treatment of patients requires that each individual receive health care of equal quality, irrespective of personal characteristics other than their clinical condition and preferences for care. The NHCS will facilitate studies of equity in care by providing additional detail by which to identify patient personal characteristics unrelated to their clinical conditions. A better understanding of patient socioeconomic status (SES) will be possible, because the collection of patient address information, including ZIP Code, will facilitate sophisticated geocoding to allow for linking NHCS data to additional data sources that contain information at the ZIP code level on family income and education (which are not collected in NHCS) and race and ethnicity. Linked NHCS data with information on family income can used to address whether longer lengths of stay occur for some patients from lower SES areas who cannot be discharged to an appropriate lower level of care. This will offer insight into the extent of differences in care that patients receive from areas of different SES levels.



  1. Use of Improved Information Technology and Burden Reduction


Participating hospitals are asked to submit UB-04 administrative claims or EHR data for all inpatient discharges and all ambulatory visits. Beginning in 2019, EHR data are being submitted to the NCHS Healthcare Electronic Health Record (HEHR) System described in section A10 and UB-04 administrative claims files are being submitted to the contractor’s secure network. Burden on hospital personnel is reduced, as most of the data are acquired electronically. The HEHR system simplifies data transmission and reduces burden for hospitals participating in NHCS.


Additionally, participation burden is also reduced through the adoption of a standardized data format and with the availability of new vendor interfaces to transfer EHR data for NHCS. Since late 2015 the NHCS has been included in the CMS (EHR) Incentive Program (now called Promoting Interoperability [PI], formerly known as Meaningful Use) under the Public Health Objectives. Hospitals participating in the NHCS can use submission of NHCS data as one of their options to fulfill requirements under those objectives. Multiple CMS and Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) rules require hospitals participating in the PI Incentive Program to use the 2015 Edition Certified Electronic Health Record Technology (CEHRT) in 2019 and beyond. The standard and format required by the 2015 Edition CEHRT for transmission to Public Health Agencies is the HL7 CDA National Health Care Surveys Implementation Guide (IG) Release 1.2 or Release 1; the implementation guide created by NCHS for the National Health Care Surveys. An updated version of the IG (HL7 CDA R2 IG: National Health Care Surveys, R1 STU Release 3 - 3rd HL7 Standard for Trial Use [STU] US Realm), was balloted and approved in July 2019. Additionally, 72 EHR vendor products based on the IG Release 1.2 and/or Release 1 have been developed. EHR vendors are continuing to work with NCHS to test the interfaces built. The adoption of the IG by a majority of the EHR vendors will reduce the burden of EHR data submission.


In effort to reduce hospital burden, hospitals have the option to submit their data through Vizient which is a large provider-driven, health care performance improvement organization. With permission from the sampled hospital, NHCS can accept data submitted to Vizient. Vizient collects claims, laboratory results, and prescribed medications from member health care organizations and provides them with patient care improvement measures. To further reduce hospital burden NCHS is also exploring the use of hospital data collected from third party entities such as the American College of Emergency Physicians (ACEP) through their Clinical Emergency Department Registry (CEDR) and Premier, Inc. to supplement NHCS. ACEP and Premier collect UB-04 administrative claims and EHR data with similar data elements required by the NHCS. These third-party hospital data files would not contain patient PII data but would enable research into whether and how that third party data may be used to increase the reliability of national estimates of hospital utilization while reducing sampled hospital burden.


There is a need to collect annual hospital statistics, such as total admissions, total visits and total births, to weight the inpatient and ambulatory data. This is done via the Annual Hospital Interview. Beginning in the 2020 collection, NCHS also added several COVID-19 questions to better understand the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the sampled hospital. The COVID-19 questions will be continued in 2021 and maybe modified in the future to maintain relevancy to the hospitals. Every hospital in the sample, regardless of participation status, is asked to complete an Annual Hospital Interview via a web portal, with any needed follow-up conducted by e-mail.





  1. Efforts to Identify Duplication and Use of Similar Information


Currently, no other data collection mechanisms, either within the Federal Government or in the private sector, collect PII that allows for linkages between inpatient discharges and ED and OPD visits as well as allowing linkage to additional data sources such as the NDI and CMS Medicare MBSF. Patient PII collection allows researchers to better study the outcomes of hospital care.


Although the Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP), which is sponsored by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), collects inpatient data similar to the NHCS through its Nationwide Inpatient Sample (NIS), it does not collect data on hospital characteristics and does not collect patient PII data, which allow for data linkage to datasets such as NDI. Additionally, HCUP is not nationally representative in its sampling design and does not collect rich clinical data which is captured in EHRs.


The State Ambulatory Surgery Databases (SASD) system, a part of AHRQ’s HCUP, includes ambulatory surgery data from some states; however, these data are not from a national probability sample.


There are three provider-based data sources that collect ongoing data from the ED. They are the National Electronic Injury Surveillance System, All Injury Program (NEISS AIP) (0920-0623, Discontinued 01/26/2006) and the State Emergency Department databases (SEDD). All of these systems are limited to the ED. NEISS AIP is sponsored by the Consumer Product Safety Commission (CPSC) and designed to provide incidence estimates of all types of and causes of nonfatal injuries and poisonings treated in the ED. NHAMCS data (OMB No. 0920-0278, Exp. Date 09/30/2023) are used by NEISS AIP to benchmark their statistics. SEDD is a set of databases from data organizations in participating States that capture discharge information on ED visits that do not result in a hospital admission.


The purposes of all these data collection systems and the content and utility of the resulting data are distinctly different from those of the ED component of the NHCS. NEISS AIP is limited to a specific public health problem, while the ED component of the NHCS has the broadest coverage of all surveys to provide national general-purpose health care statistics. Data from SEDD are not nationally representative and do not contain the level of detail about the ED visit that is captured in the ED component of NHCS. Consequently, the data available from these systems are not adequate for the needs described earlier and cannot be used as an alternative for the NHCS.



  1. Impact on Small Businesses or Other Small Entities


For the NHCS, only a relatively few sampled hospitals would be considered as small businesses or small entities. Efforts to minimize the burden, particularly on small hospitals, include the following:


  1. Data elements for NHCS come from already electronically available information, including a state file already submitted to the state; data already submitted to Vizient; UB-04 administrative claims data, which are needed for billing purposes and routinely collected and recorded by all hospitals; or EHR data which are used by hospitals to capture patient data.

  2. Non-profit hospitals in the NHCS sample may be eligible for a community benefit tax exemption for participating in the survey. For more information on this community benefit, please see section B3.

  3. Development of vendor interfaces that allow hospitals to extract data required by the HL7 CDA IG specifications and make NHCS data submission easier and standardized.

  4. NCHS is in discussions about ways to reduce the burden of the Annual Hospital Interview (Attachment C) in future collection years. This may be achieved through eliminating certain time-consuming questions and/or streamlining the overall questionnaire to make it more user-friendly. Additionally, NCHS plans to test the questions in coordination with the Collaborating Center for Questionnaire Design and Evaluation Research (CCQDER) at NCHS. NCHS will inform OMB and seek approval for the proposed changes once they are finalized.



  1. Consequences of Collecting the Information Less Frequently


There are three major reasons to continue to collect data on an annual basis (or quarterly and monthly as needed to facilitate timely submission of data): availability of annual estimates, budgetary considerations, and data quality.


  1. Annual estimates - NCHS plans to continue to make annual estimates of critical utilization statistics. Annual estimates are critical for modeling health care delivery and for studying specific diseases. A continuous annual survey provides data for trend analysis that is often the basis on which to evaluate the effects of change in Federal programs and policies. One of the most striking examples of this effect, which was tracked by NHDS, was the dramatic decline in inpatient procedures for lens extractions at the time the Medicare Prospective Payment System was implemented. In addition, many years of data on hysterectomies were needed to model the effects of this procedure. NHDS data were used to detect the first decline in hospital use for patients with human immunodeficiency virus (HIV), and (of great public interest) the first increase in the average length of stay for childbirth in two decades.


The rapidly changing environment of hospital ambulatory health care delivery and the current interest in health care reform lend importance to having timely, annual data for decision making; describing the use of hospital ED and OPD services, including ambulatory surgery; monitoring the effects of change; and planning possible changes to payment policies. With the need to track the effects of the health care industry’s continual evolution, this information has become even more crucial. Having continuous data collection before, during, and after policy changes and restructuring is essential. Because data from the surveys are often analyzed by combining data across years, the potential consequence of less frequent data collection would be the inability to study issues such as ED crowding, EHR adoption, preventive services, and those low frequency procedures that require combining data across time periods. NHDS provided and NHAMCS still provides annual updates for numerous tables in the Congressionally mandated NCHS report, Health, United States. In addition, NHDS and NHAMCS data were used by the Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) in the development and monitoring of goals for the 2000, 2010, 2020, and 2030 Health Objectives for the nation as well as the National Reports on Quality and Disparities.


B) Budgetary considerations - Extensive information captured during data collection procedures prior to the NHCS has shown that the cost to the government is less when data are collected annually. Based on this experience, it has been determined that conducting this survey less frequently would require the very expensive process of re-inducting hospitals into the survey and training new contractor staff every two to three years.


C) Data quality - The highest quality of data can best be maintained when data are collected on an ongoing basis. Ongoing data collection minimizes disruption in the field related to re-recruiting and re-starting data collection with hospitals. Ongoing data collection is also essential to have data on health trends in the population.


  1. Special Circumstances Relating to the Guidelines of 5 CFR 1320.5


There is one special circumstance that applies to collection of NHCS data. NHCS will collect the OMB race and ethnicity codes in as much detail as possible. States vary with the extent to which they permit race and ethnicity to be collected and included on the UB-04, state file or EHR.



  1. Comments in Response to the Federal Register Notice and Efforts to Consult Outside the Agency


A) The 60-day Notice for public comments was published in the Federal Register, on July 19, 2021 ( Volume 86, Number 38094, Pages 38094-38095).


B) The NHCS is intended to provide improved data for use by both governmental and non-governmental policymakers, Federal and state agencies, clinical researchers, health services researchers, commercial institutions, and private citizens. Due to the broad audience and stakeholders for this project, NCHS solicited a wide spectrum of views concerning the focus of the inpatient, ED, and EHR data collection.


More recently, NCHS consulted with the following individuals:


  • Svetla Slavova

Associate Professor, Biostatistics 

University of Kentucky

Kentucky Injury Prevention & Research Center

333 Waller Avenue, Suite 242, Lexington, Kentucky 40504

Phone: (859) 323-7873

Email: [email protected]

 

  • Janet Kuramoto-Crawford

National Institute of Health, National Institute on Drug Abuse

3 White Flint N, 11601 Landsdown St, North Bethesda, MD 20852

Phone: (301) 443-8856

Email: [email protected]

  

  • Susan Lumsden

Program Manager

Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services

200 Independence Avenue SW Washington, DC 20201

Phone: (202) 260-0088

Email: [email protected]

 

  • Catherine Dormitzer

Center for Drug Evaluation and Research

Food and Drug Administration (FDA)

10001 New Hampshire Ave, Silver Spring, MD 20903

Phone: (301) 796-1785

Email: [email protected]


  • Christine Cox

Senior Fellow, Health Care

NORC at the University of Chicago

4350 East-West Highway, 8th Floor, Bethesda MD 20814

Phone: (301) 471-0750

Email: [email protected]



Outreach Activities:


Outreach activities to promote NHCS have included attendance and exhibiting at conferences, conducting presentations in academic forums, and disseminating data-related information through the survey’s listserv. For a list of conferences attended, please see section A16.


NCHS staff have presented at several academic venues to promote use of NHCS data among students and researchers. A presentation at the University of Kentucky School of Public Health included, “The National Hospital Care Survey: Modernizing the Monitoring of the Nation’s Health Care by Linking Electronic Health Records to Death Record Information and Administrative Data.” Another presentation at the George Washington University’s Milken Institute of Public Health provided an overview of the survey and its linkage capabilities. Finally, a presentation at John’s Hopkins Bloomberg School of Public Health describes the information available on medications through NHCS’ EHR data.


The NHCS-designated list serv reaches the survey’s stakeholders and data users. This email distribution list serv includes over 1,400 members and provides updates on NHCS data availability and newly published reports. Since the last clearance, several announcements were distributed, including announcements for: several new demonstration papers (e.g., stroke hospitalizations; opioid-involved hospitalizations and deaths; respiratory illness ED visits); the availability of new data files (e.g., 2016 NHCS data, NHCS files linked to mortality and CMS datasets) in the NCHS Research Data Center; and the release of NHCS’s new Hospital COVID-19 Dashboard (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/covid19/nhcs.htm) featuring COVID-19 encounters from selected NHCS hospitals.



  1. Explanation of Any Payments or Gifts to Respondents


NCHS provides a one-time $500 incentive to each sampled hospital to set up the electronic data transmission to participate in the survey. In addition, NCHS provides each of the 608 sampled hospitals $500 after a full year of EHR, UB-04 administrative claims data, state files, or Vizient files are received. 

A continuing education module was recently updated with new information about the survey, to serve as an educational and recruitment tool highlighting the NHCS. This web-based instrument was added to the NHCS website (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/training/nhcs/index.html ). Both the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) and Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) have granted approval of the module, so health information management and health information technology staff from the hospital-community are able to obtain two free continuing education units by completing the NHCS module.



  1. Protection of the Privacy and Confidentiality of Information Provided by Respondents


The NCHS Privacy Act Coordinator and the NCHS Confidentiality Officer have reviewed this package and have determined that the Privacy Act is applicable because this study includes the collection of information in identifiable form. The applicable System of Records Notice is 09-20-0167 Health Resources Utilization Statistics.


An assurance of confidentiality is provided to all respondents according to section 308 (d) of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 242m) which states:


No information, if an establishment or person supplying the information or described in it is identifiable, obtained in the course of activities undertaken or supported under section...306 (NCHS legislation),...may be used for any purpose other than the purpose for which it was supplied unless such establishment or person has consented (as determined under regulations of the Secretary) to its use for such other purpose and (1) in the case of information obtained in the course of health statistical or epidemiological activities under section...306, such information may not be published or released in other form if the particular establishment or person supplying the information or described in it is identifiable unless such establishment or person has consented (as determined under regulations of the Secretary) to its publication or release in other form,...”


In addition, legislation covering confidentiality is provided according to section 513 of the Confidential Information Protection and Statistical Efficiency Act of 2018 (Pub. L. No. 115-435, 132 Stat. 5529 § 302)) which states:


Whoever, being an officer, employee, or agent of an agency acquiring information for exclusively statistical purposes, having taken and subscribed the oath of office, or having sworn to observe the limitations imposed by this section, comes into possession of such information by reason of his or her being an officer, employee, or agent and, knowing that the disclosure of the specific information is prohibited under the provisions of this subchapter, willfully discloses the information in any manner to a person or agency not entitled to receive it, shall be guilty of a class E felony and imprisoned for not more than 5 years, or fined not more than $250,000, or both.”

Overview of the Data Collection System


The target universe of the NHCS is inpatient discharges, and patient visits made to EDs and OPDs of non-Federal, non-institutional hospitals with six or more beds staffed for inpatient use in the 50 states and the District of Columbia. An Introductory letter from the NCHS Director (Attachment D) along with a copy of the NHCS Overview Flyer (Attachment E) are sent and followed by a telephone call from the contractor staff to verify hospital eligibility for the survey and to arrange for an appointment with the chief executive officer and/or whoever is designated as the coordinator for this survey.


For eligible hospitals selected into the survey, hospital-level data will be collected from hospital staff via a secure web portal, with any needed follow up conducted by telephone or mail. Participating hospitals are asked to submit EHR, UB-04 administrative claims, state file data, or Vizient data for all inpatient discharges and all ambulatory visits.


No potentially identifiable data will be released in any form to the public. Any data transmitted by a hospital to the contractor will be transferred through a secure data transfer system. Reports produced by NCHS about the data or using the data will not identify an individual hospital or an individual discharge/visit. Public use files will contain no information that can identify any individual or hospital. Restricted-use files may be accessed through the NCHS Research Data Center to allow linkage to other data sources.


Patient Items of Information to be Collected:


The following hospital-level data will be collected: survey eligibility criteria, service characteristics, expected number of visits, information on the impact of COVID-19 on the hospital. Discharge-level and visit data collected includes data elements on the UB-04, state files, and from EHR data. These include patient demographics, diagnoses and procedures, source of payment information, charges, and information related to revenue codes. For hospitals submitting EHR data, additional variables include labs, medications, and clinician notes. A complete list of items collected can be found in Attachments F and G.

Information in Identifiable Form:


The NHCS will collect patient PII, also referred to as information in identifiable form. One example of the value of patient PII is that it allows linkage to the NDI, providing better information on outcomes of hospitalization. Collection of patient PII also allows for linkages (e.g., inpatient discharges with ED and OPD visits). In its approval of the NHCS, the NCHS Ethics Review Board agreed that this research could not be conducted practicably without access and use of patient PII. The availability of PII data items is dependent on the data source. Vizient does not include information that can be used to identify the patient. The list of requested PII includes the following 13 data elements for patients, one data item for physicians and four for hospitals:


Patient information:


1. Patient name

2. Birth date

3. Address

4. ZIP Code

5. Dates of admission and discharge

6. Date of visit

7. Procedure dates

8. Social security number (where available)

9. Medical record number (where available)

10. Patient control number

11. Medicare health insurance benefit/claim number

12. NPI (National Provider Identifier) number

13. Payer Name



Annual Hospital Interview (Attachment C):


14. Hospital name

15. Hospital address

16. Hospital telephone number

17. Contact name



Hospitals submit EHR data to the NCHS HEHR system and submit UB-04 claims, state files, and Vizient files to the sub-contractor’s secure network. The purpose of the HEHR system is to provide the Division of Health Care Statistics the technical support it needs to implement the public health registry component of the NHCS and to support the receipt of data from eligible providers and hospitals in accordance with the PI Program rules. This includes, but is not limited to, planning, designing, developing, and maintaining the infrastructure necessary to operate the survey’s registry portal to allow for registration of providers and hospitals that intend to participate in the survey and submit data. Upload interfaces via CDC’s Secure Access Management Services (SAMS) and/or DIRECT secure messaging are included to allow for bulk upload of data through the registry portal. Uploaded data are then integrated, harmonized, and loaded into a data warehouse. An environment for testing and validation is now set up to allow for providers and hospitals to test the clinical data submitted.



SAMS provides a secure data transfer service along with a strong suite of security controls to host applications and exchange data between CDC programs and public health partners while providing a high level of data integrity, confidentiality, reliability, and security. This meets NCHS/CDC policies for data transmission via the Internet. Users accessing systems protected by SAMS are required to adhere to the identity verification and authentication requirements for the Electronic Authentication Assurance Level (EAAL) of the protected system. SAMS provides system monitoring on a 24/7 basis, data redundancy features, and disaster recovery features for select information systems. DIRECT is a national encryption standard for securely exchanging clinical health care messages/data via the internet. DIRECT provides strong security and privacy protection using a unified standard that all systems can leverage.



On receipt of the data within the HEHR system, all data considered PII, both direct and indirect, and non-PII will be loaded/saved to specially designated and configured file servers and database servers that are in accordance with the Confidential Information Protection Statistical Efficiency Act (CIPSEA). HEHR system servers are secured physical components that are only accessible by NCHS-designated staff. All direct PII data containing personal identifiers (e.g., name, address, phone number, SSN, etc.) will be loaded onto separate files in separate secure sub-shares and specifically designated tables that will be encrypted. The strictest access controls will be in place for all PII data. The indirect PII data will also be loaded onto the specially designated secure sub-shares and tables. However, these will have different access controls than the direct PII data. Non-PII data (or public use files) will be downloaded onto the specially designated and configured NCHS/DHCS separate secure CDC network sub-shares. The HEHR system will communicate with Consolidated Statistical Platform (CSP) (another CIPSEA compliant system) primarily for analytic purposes.


A website dedicated to NHCS (http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhcs.htm) describes the survey, answers frequently asked questions, describes how the Privacy Rule permits data collection for the NHCS, and provides a link to the participant page (http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhcs/participant.htm).


The collection of information in identifiable form or PII requires strong measures to ensure that private information is not disclosed. Data will be held confidential according to Section 308(d) of the Public Health Services Act (42, U.S. Code, 242m) and CIPSEA (Pub. L. No. 115-435, 132 Stat. 5529 § 302). All NCHS employees as well as contract staff receive appropriate training and sign a “Nondisclosure Agreement.” Staff of collaborating agencies are also required to sign this statement. The transmission and storage of data are protected through procedures such as encryption and carefully restricted access. No PII data are shared with researchers. Only NCHS employees and agents who need the personal information for linking to various databases may use such data. Everyone else who uses NHCS data may do so only after all identifiable information is removed.


The NHCS data will be made available via public use data files to the public. Confidential data are never released to the public. All PII such as hospital name and address, patient date of birth, and any other specific information are removed from the public release files. All data releases are reviewed by the NCHS Disclosure Review Board to avoid data breaches, such as release of detailed geographic information that may allow anyone to identify hospitals, practices, or individuals in the general population.


NCHS has one contractor conducting NHCS activities, including recruitment and data collection and processing. The contractor selected for NHCS is required to provide a comprehensive data security plan (DSP) to NCHS to ensure safety and confidentiality of the NHCS data. The plan follows the structure and guidelines established by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST; 800-series)2 for meeting the requirements of the Federal Information Security Management Act (FISMA).3 The DSP complies with all relevant laws, regulations, and policies governing the security of data and the protection of confidentiality, including the Privacy Act of 1974 (5 USC 552a), section 308(d) of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 242m) and the CIPSEA (Title III of the Foundations for Evidence-Based Policymaking Act of 2018 (Pub. L. No. 115-435, 132 Stat. 5529 § 302)). The DSP considers all known data security and confidentiality protection risks. However, our approaches and specific procedures will evolve as we identify new data security threats and implement improved practices. The DSP will be updated as needed with more detailed, process-oriented data security protocols. Information technology products and systems will comply with the FISMA regulations and supporting NIST guidelines (NIST Special Publication (SP) 800-60).



  1. Ethics Review Board (ERB) and Justification for Sensitive Questions


The NHCS data collection plan has been approved by the NCHS Ethics Review Board (ERB) (Protocol #2021-01; Attachment H) based on 45 CFR 46. In its recent review, the NCHS Human Subjects Contact determined that the new protocol #2021-01 NHCS is a public health surveillance activity under the 2018 requirements of the Common Rule (45 CFR 46.102(l)(2)). Since NHCS is now considered a surveillance project, HIPAA explicitly permits sharing of PII with a public health authority authorized by law to collect or receive the information for the purpose of preventing or controlling disease, injury, or disability without a waiver; therefore, justifications for waiver of informed consent are not necessary.


For each hospital in the NHCS sample, the recruitment contractor sends an introductory letter (Attachment D) and overview flyer (Attachment E) to the hospital administrator addressed from the Director of NCHS. The letter describes the purpose of the survey, states that participation is voluntary and all information is kept confidential, and highlights the benefits of participation. The overview flyer then further describes protections to and confidentiality of participants: the collected information that would allow identification of individual hospitals or patients is not shared with anyone, and public use data files will only be available on the NHCS website once individually identifiable information is removed. The legal authority for NHCS data collection is Section 306 of the Public Health Service Act (42 U.S.C. 242k).


The NHCS collects PII. These PII elements have been cleared in a prior approval of this package (OMB # 0920-0212, Exp. Date 03/31/2022). One example of the value of PII is that it allows linkage to the NDI and other data sources, providing better information on outcomes of hospitalization. Collection of PII also allows for linkages between inpatient discharges and ED and OPD visits. The list of requested items considered to be sensitive includes the following eleven data elements on patients and one data element for physicians:


Patient:

1. Name

2. Birth date

3. Address

4. ZIP Code

5. Dates of admission and discharge (for the inpatient discharges and ED visits)

6. Visit dates (for ED and OPD visits)

7. Procedure dates

8. Social security number (where available)

9. Medical record number (where available)

10. Patient control number

11. Medicare health insurance benefit/claim number


Physician:

12. NPI (National Provider Identifier) number


Patient name and social security number are currently collected as PII included in the NHCS. To accurately link patients to the NCHS NDI, at least two of the following fields are required: valid SSN, valid date of birth (month, day, and year) or complete name (first name, middle initial, and last name). States vary on whether they require the social security number on the UB-04 administrative claims. Although linkages could be made to the NDI without the SSN, researchers planning to use the NDI are encouraged to collect or compile as many of the NDI data items as possible. For more information on the linked NDI data, see the web link at: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data-linkage/nhcs-ndi.htm.


Linking NHCS data to the CMS Medicare MBSF data also requires at least two of the following fields: valid SSN, valid date of birth (month, day, and year) or complete name (first name, middle initial, and last name). For more information about the linked NHCS and CMS data refer to the web link: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data-linkage/CMS-Medicare-Restricted.htm.


Birth date will be converted to age by the contractor during processing. This is done to minimize error that can be introduced by doing this manually in the field at the time of data collection. This is especially important in going across centuries and for newborns in going across years. Age is (of course) very important to analyze because of its relation to health conditions and treatments which vary by age.


Patient address and ZIP Code of residence are required to link data from the U.S. Census Bureau. It is well known that health status and the use of health services vary considerably by social economic status (SES). Those with lower income and less education, for example, are generally in worse health and sometimes have reduced access to medical care compared to others. It is therefore important to be able to use NHCS to track the use of hospital care by SES. Unfortunately, measures of an individual's SES, such as family income or education level, are not routinely recorded in medical records. Geocoding complete patient addresses to the Census tract or block group level and using Census measures of area SES at these levels will yield reasonable proxies for individual-level SES (Krieger et al., 2002).4


Dates of admission and discharge are essential to calculate days of care, which are needed to measure total inpatient days in the United States and to measure average length of stay. Trends in both measures are critical to assessing changes in the health care system. For example, they may reflect factors associated with new Federal programs and policies, such as the implementation of payment changes or laws that regulate the early discharge of mothers and newborns. With precise dates in hand, NCHS can calculate days of care per discharge regardless of the number of days in a month, leap years, or other nuances.


Procedure dates are necessary, in conjunction with admission and discharge dates, to determine the timing of procedures within a hospitalization. Procedure dates were previously collected as part of NHDS and helped provide a much clearer picture of a surgical patient’s hospital course than would otherwise be available. For example, without procedure dates, a patient who dies from a severe post-operative infection many days after a planned surgery may look identical to a patient who is rushed to the operating room many days into a hospitalization for an emergency procedure and dies in the operating room. Procedure dates provide crucial data for researchers in many areas, including the measurement of complications, medical errors, and risk-adjusted outcomes of hospitalizations.


The retention of the medical record number will allow the collection of a single patient’s data from several sources within a hospital, such as the medical record, laboratory records, hospital billing records, emergency department, ambulatory department, and ambulatory surgery locations. This will provide access to more comprehensive and detailed clinical information, as well as additional outcomes and quality measures.


Patient control number is a required element on the UB-04 (not in an EHR) and is assigned to patients for billing purposes. Along with the medical records number, the patient control number can be used to link to other data sources in the hospital, particularly billing records.

Medicare health insurance benefit/claim number is another piece of protected health information included in NHCS. CMS is in the process of collecting data from hospitals on the quality of care that is provided to each patient admitted to any Medicare certified hospital who has one of a particular set of diagnoses. For example, for all cases of pneumonia, Medicare would collect data on whether each patient admitted received antibiotics within 4 hours of presentation.


The National Provider Identifier (NPI) is a unique identifier for healthcare providers. It is a required data element on the UB-04 and is often available through an EHR. This data element allows for linkage of physician specialty information to the individual patient’s care.


Information linking provider identifiers to their characteristics (e.g., specialty, provider age) is also available from CMS for research purposes at: https://nppes.cms.hhs.gov/NPPES/.



  1. Estimates of Annualized Burden Hours and Costs


A. Burden Hours


Data on burden are shown in Table 1. The total sample size for the 2022-2024 survey will consist of approximately 608 hospitals. Hospital interviews will be conducted by contractor staff.


The first part of recruitment includes a one-time Initial Hospital Intake Questionnaire (Attachment I) that is administered over the telephone to verify the hospital’s eligibility. This intake questionnaire is conducted on all new hospitals and takes 1 hour to complete. Since at least 200 hospitals have already been recruited under the previous clearance, at most 408 hospitals remain for a total of 136 annualized burden hours (408 respondents/3 years) over the course of three years. No changes have been made to this instrument since the last approval was granted.


We anticipate that hospitals may require additional information about participating in the survey and a one-hour survey presentation has been designed for them in the form of a Recruitment Survey Presentation. This will represent another 136 annualized hours (408 respondents/3 years) over the course of the three-year clearance. As needed, the presentation (Attachment J) will be used to complement the telephone recruitment. The presentation takes 1 hour to complete.


Hospitals will be asked to transmit UB-04 administrative claims data, state file, and Vizient files monthly or EHR data on a quarterly basis for all records and claims, both inpatient and ambulatory. It is estimated that this will take one hour per hospital per submission to prepare and transmit the data file. We estimate about 200 hospitals would submit EHR data, and the remaining hospitals (408) that are not yet ready to send EHR data would transmit their UB-04 claims, state file or Vizient file. This represents 4,896 annualized hours for hospitals submitting UB-04 claims or a state file and 800 annualized hours for hospitals sending EHR data (Attachments K and L).


Each participating hospital of the 608 will be asked to complete an Annual Hospital Interview (Attachment C) that will be conducted via a web portal. This 2-hour interview collects annual statistics needed for weighting both the inpatient and ambulatory data which include hospital characteristics such as total numbers of admissions, total visits, discharges, and live births; therefore, non-respondents will also be asked to provide this information. Additionally, the interview collects information about the impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the sampled hospital. The total burden is 1,216 hours.


The new total annualized burden is 7,184 hours.

Table 1. Estimated Annualized Burden Hours


Respondents

Form Name

Number of Respondents

Number of Responses per Respondent

Avg. Burden per Response

(in hours)

Total Burden Hours

Hospital DHIM or DHIT

Initial Hospital Intake Questionnaire

150

1

1

136

Hospital CEO/CFO

Recruitment Survey Presentation

150

1

1

136

Hospital DHIM or DHIT

Prepare and transmit UB-04 or State File for Inpatient and Ambulatory (monthly)

408

12

1

4,896

Hospital DHIM or DHIT

Prepare and transmit EHR for Inpatient and Ambulatory (quarterly)

200

4

1

800

Hospital CEO/CFO

Annual Hospital Interview

608

1

2

1,216

TOTAL





7,184


B. Burden Costs


The average response burden cost for the NHCS is estimated to be $381,916.24. The hourly wage estimates for the Director of Health Information Management and the Hospital CEO/CFO were based on the AHIMA salary studies5 and PayScale.6


Table 2. Estimated Annualized Burden Costs


Type of

Respondent

Form Name

Total burden hours

Hourly Wage Rate

Total Respondent Costs*

Hospital Director of health information management

Initial Hospital Intake Questionnaire

136


$48.38

$6,579.68

Hospital CEO/CFO

Recruitment Survey Presentation

136

$73.79

$10,035.44

Hospital Director of health information management

Prepare and transmit UB-04, State File, or Vizient file for Inpatient and Ambulatory

4,896

$48.38

$236,868.48

Hospital Director of health information management

Prepare and transmit EHR for Inpatient and Ambulatory

800

$48.38

$38,704

Hospital CEO/CFO

Annual Hospital Interview

1,216

$73.79

$89,728.64

Total


7,184


$381,916.24

*Hospitals will be compensated for their participation as described in Section 9 and this table does not include those costs.



  1. Estimates of Other Total Annual Cost Burden to Respondents or Record Keepers


None. No additional respondent capital and maintenance costs are incurred by NHCS reporting because all hospital purchases of equipment or services are made for reasons other than to provide information or keep records for the government and are part of their usual or customary business practices.



  1. Annualized Cost to the Government


The estimated total average annual cost of the NHCS to the government will be $8.7 million. NCHS has begun using the infrastructure at CDC to collect, process and store data collected from the NHCS.


Average Annual Costs for the NHCS Annualized Over Three Years


NHCS 2022-2024

Data collection contract

$7,200,000

NHCS Project Staff salaries

$1,500,000

Total

$8,700,000







  1. Explanation for Program Changes or Adjustments


The currently approved burden is 7,080 hours, and the proposed burden for the NHCS is 7,184 hours per data collection year. Because additional sample hospitals have been recruited for NHCS since the last approval request, fewer hospitals still need the initial two steps of recruitment. The result is a reduction of the annualized number of hospitals receiving the Intake Questionnaire (14 hours) and Recruitment Survey Presentation (14 hours). Every three years the NHCS sample is updated to sample for newly opened hospitals, increasing the survey’s sample size. Due to the increase of the sample since the last request for approval, there was an increase in the number of hospitals transmitting UB-04 claims (108 hours) and EHR data (4 hours) as well as the number completing the Annual Hospital Interview (20 hours). This results in a net increase of 104 burden hours. 



  1. Plans for Tabulation and Publications and Project Time Schedule


Data from the NHDS and NHAMCS have been published annually as NCHS Vital and Health Statistics Series 13 reports, National Health Statistics Reports, NCHS Data Briefs, web tables and dashboards, articles in professional journals, and other special reports. Special reports on utilization trends, specific diagnoses, selected patient and hospital characteristics, source of payment, prescribing trends, and methodology are also published in various NCHS reports or journal articles. It is anticipated that once enough sample hospitals are recruited for the NHCS data to be nationally representative, NHCS data will be published in the same or similar publications as NHDS and NHAMCS data. Data from the NHCS will be presented separately for inpatient discharges, visits to EDs and OPDs and also combined in reports.


Data Files:


Although not enough hospitals have been recruited for NHCS to produce a public use file, NHCS datasets are available to researchers through the NCHS Research Data Center (RDC). To date, the NHCS 2013-2016 data files with restricted access information are available through the RDC. Additionally, there is a supplemental file for the 2016 data available in the RDC that includes information on encounters identified as opioid-involved and opioid overdose. The file also includes information on 13 specific types of opioids identified in the data. NCHS has been able to expand the analytic utility of NHCS data by linking it with vital and administrative records. As such, the following linked files are also available through the RDC:


Linked files for 2014 include:

  • 2014 NHCS data linked to 2014-2015 National Death Index (NDI) data;

  • 2014 NHCS Data linked to the 2014-2015 NDI and to the 2014-2015 Drug-Involved Mortality (DIM) Data; and

  • 2014 NHCS data linked to 2014-2015 CMS Medicare Master Beneficiary Summary File (MBSF).


Linked files for 2016 include:

  • 2016 NHCS data linked to 2016-2017 NDI data;

  • 2016 NHCS data linked to 2016-2017 CMS Medicare MBSF, Claims/Encounters, and Assessment data; and

  • 2016 NHCS Data with Enhanced Opioid-Identification linked to the 2016-2017 National Death Index (NDI) and to the 2016-2017 Drug-Involved Mortality (DIM) Data.


Annual public use files containing information collected on inpatient discharges and ED and OPD visits will continue under the NHCS once enough hospitals have been recruited into the survey. To facilitate trend analysis, multi-year public use files (one for newborns and one for non-newborns) provide multiple years of inpatient data in a standard format with standard definitions across survey years. In the meanwhile, CD-ROMs for 1970-78 and 1979-2007 in ASCII format are currently available to the public, and 2008-2010 data are available for downloading from the NHDS website. Data on visits to ED for 1992-2018 and to OPDs for 1992-2011 are also currently available for downloading from the NHAMCS website. These will continue to be available, as NHCS has been structured to allow trend analysis continuing from the prior versions of NHDS and NHAMCS.


Publications and Presentations:


NHCS staff continue to publish demonstration publications using NHCS data. Since the last clearance, staff have published papers on Alzheimer disease (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhsr/nhsr121-508.pdf), stroke (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhsr/NHSR132-508.pdf), opioid-involved ED visits (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhsr/nhsr149-508.pdf), opioid-involved deaths (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhsr/nhsr141-508.pdf), and respiratory illness ED visits (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhsr/nhsr151-508.pdf). These papers illustrate how NHCS can track patients through settings in the sampled hospital and how these data can be linked to the NDI to measure post-discharge mortality outcomes. Additionally, a number of papers compare numbers between NHAMCS and NHCS illustrating their data similarities.


Additionally, NCHS staff have demonstrated the capabilities of NHCS data through posters and presentations at various conferences and forums. This includes presentations on opioid and respiratory disease encounters at the 2020 Joint Statistical Meeting (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhcs/JSM-508.pdf); insurance status and maternal health at the 2020 International Conference on Health Policy Statistics (https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/nhcs/maternal_poster-508.pdf); congestive heart failure hospitalizations at the 2021 International Conference on Establishment Statistics in June; development of the enhanced opioid-identification algorithm at the 2021 AcademyHealth Annual Research Meeting; and implementation of the NHCS COVID-19 dashboard at the 2021 Joint Statistical Meeting.


A complete list of reports and presentations using NHCS data is available on the NHCS Data Uses webpage: https://www.cdc.gov/nchs/nhcs/data_uses.htm.


In the future, staff will continue to present NHCS data at meetings and conferences of professional organizations, such as the AcademyHealth, Joint Statistical Meetings, National Association of Health Data Organizations, National Rural Health Association, American College of Emergency Physicians, Society for Academic Emergency Medicine, and Gerontological Society of America. These presentations deal with specific aspects of the survey or special analyses of survey data.


Conferences attended either to promote or conduct outreach for the NHCS since the last clearance include: Health Information Management Systems Society, American Hospital Association Leadership Summit, Health Datapalooza, World Health Care Congress, National Rural Health Association Annual Conference, and the American Health Information Management Association Annual Conference.


Timelines:


This clearance request covers three years, 2022-2024, of data collection. The data collection and analysis processes will be ongoing. Based on prior experience as well as activities currently underway, the following is a projected data collection schedule for 2022 and beyond.


Hospital recruitment .........................................…………………….……………………………………... Ongoing

Continue transmission of monthly UB-04 data, state file, or Vizient file………immediately after OMB approval

Transmission

2022 EHR data:

  • 1st Quarter…………………………….………………............................3 months after OMB approval

  • 2nd Quarter………………………………………..……………………………..6 months after OMB approval

  • 3rd Quarter……………………………………………………………………….9 months after OMB approval

  • 4th Quarter……………………………………………………………………..12 months after OMB approval

End of electronic data collection………..........................………..........12 months after OMB approval

First tabulations from the 2022 electronic data.............................20 months after OMB approval

Public use file (if sufficient data collected to make

national estimates).........................................................................20 months after OMB approval



  1. Reason(s) Display of OMB Expiration Date is Inappropriate


The OMB expiration date will be displayed.


  1. Exceptions to Certification for Paperwork Reduction Act Submission


The certifications are included in this submission.

1 Institute of Medicine (IOM). Crossing the Quality Chasm: A New Health System for the 21st Century. Washington, D.C: National Academy Press; 2001.


4 www.hsph.harvard.edu/thegeocodingproject/webpage/monograph/publications.htm


6


File Typeapplication/vnd.openxmlformats-officedocument.wordprocessingml.document
AuthorChari, Karishma (CDC/DDPHSS/NCHS/DHCS)
File Modified0000-00-00
File Created2021-11-05

© 2024 OMB.report | Privacy Policy