State Reporting Requirements for Hospitals
Hospitals must report certain types of information to their state department of health and other state agencies. The specific requirements differ from state to state, and can change over time as well. What remains constant, however, is the need for efficient and accurate methods for meeting these reporting requirements.
To prepare for this Discussion research the statutory requirements for hospital reporting in your state, or another state of interest to you. The National Academy for State Health Policy report in this week's Learning Resources will provide a good start to your research, but you should do further exploration to fill out your understanding of the state reporting requirements by hospitals in your selected state.
With these requirements in mind, consider the following:
What data are needed to fulfill these reporting requirements?
Select a particular type of hospital, such as a small community hospital or a large urban facility within a multi-state hospital system, and identify challenges this institution might encounter in complying with these requirements.
Review the health information systems you have learned about so far in this course, and do further exploration, as needed, to identify systems that would help in capturing, processing, and providing the data required for those reports.
Summarize the state's reporting requirements for hospitals.
Analyze challenges that these requirements might pose to your selected type of hospital.
Propose which hospital IT systems might be used to produce the data necessary for these reports. If multiple systems could be used, select which one you think is best and state why.
Briefly, describe at least one way in which these reporting requirements contribute to the public's health, and one way in which this reporting benefits the organization providing the data.
Read a selection of your colleagues' postings from this Discussion and the other Discussion thread.
Respond by Day 6 to at least one of your colleagues' postings-on a state different from the one you posted on- in one or more of the following ways:
Ask a probing question.
Expand on the colleague's posting with additional insight and resources.
Offer polite disagreement or critique, supported with evidence.
In addition to, but not in place of the above, you may:
Offer and support an opinion.
Validate an idea with your own experience.
Make a suggestion or comment that guides or facilitates the Discussion.