
Online
Access to Utah Hospital Charge
and Quality Info Now Available
November
14, 2006
Two
new web sites unveiled today
provide free access to an unprecedented
level of detail about charges,
services and quality indicators
at Utah hospitals.
The first
web site, known as “Utah
PricePoint” (www.utpricepoint.org)
allows users to easily access charge
information about all common hospitalization
procedures at any Utah hospital.
Consumers may search for charge
data using a “basic query” method
or a more comprehensive “advanced
query” method. Along with
providing charge data, CheckPoint
provides information on the average
length of stay for each procedure.
The second
web site, known as “Utah
CheckPoint,” provides meaningful
information on hospital quality
and error prevention practices.
Checkpoint provides reliable data
on 14 preventions that medical
experts agree should be taken to
treat heart attacks, heart failure
and pneumonia. There are six measures
for heart attack, four measures
for congestive heart failure and
four measures for pneumonia reported
in Utah CheckPoint. The web site
displays the four most recently
reported quarters of quality data
from hospitals. The measures provide
national and state comparisons
on quality indicators, and more
measures are anticipated to be
added in the future.
The websites
are sponsored by UHA, Utah Hospitals
and Health Systems Association,
Utah Department of Health, and
HealthInsight. Both websites
may be accessed through the Utah
Department of Health’s “My
Healthcare in Utah” website,
located at www.health.utah.gov/myhealthcare . The direct link to Utah PricePoint
is www.utpricepoint.org ; for Utah
Checkpoint, go to www.utcheckpoint.org . Both sites offer reciprocal links
for the convenience of consumers.
“We are pleased to be able
to work in conjunction with the
Utah Health Data Committee and
HealthInsight to provide consumers
with a significant step in improving
transparency in healthcare quality
and costs,” commented Joseph
M. Krella, President of UHA, Utah
Hospitals and Health Systems Association. “We
don’t see the launch of these
sites as the end of our efforts,
but rather the beginning of a strong
partnership on which to build.”
“We are committed to transparency
and public accountability, and
we believe Utah hospitals are committed
to those goals as well,” noted
Marc Bennett, President and CEO
of HealthInsight. “The UHA
and Utah Health Data Committee
have been instrumental in providing
the resources necessary to stimulate
quality improvement and allow consumers
to make more informed decisions
about their health care.”
Along with the launch of these
web sites, the Utah Health Data
Committee is announcing release
of its second hospital comparison
report on maternity and newborns.
The Committee has produced topical
healthcare reports comparing hospitals
in Utah since December 2005.
"The more
a person knows about the cost and
quality of care, the more likely
they are to receive the care they
need and deserve,” commented
David Sundwall, M.D., Executive
Director of the Utah Department
of Health. “We call these
people "informed health care
consumers" and consider them
an essential component of our efforts
to improve health care and to develop
healthy communities for our state.
As healthcare costs rise, it is
important that we give Utahns the
tools they need to be a part of
the solution-that is, to be efficient
consumers of health care."
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