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CAREGIVING RESOURCES FOR
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OF LIFE AND EASING THE ROLE OF THE
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Health Care Quality Gaps and Disparities
persist in every State
Newswise, June 6, 2011 — States are seeing
improvements in health care quality, but
disparities for their minority and low-
income residents persist, according to the
2010 State Snapshots, released today by the
Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
New Hampshire, Minnesota, Maine,
Massachusetts and Rhode Island showed the
greatest overall performance improvement in
2010. The five states with the smallest
overall performance improvement were
Kentucky, Louisiana, New Mexico, Oklahoma
and Texas. As in previous years, AHRQ’s 2010
State Snapshots show that no state does well
or poorly on all quality measures.
Among minority and low-income Americans, the
level of health care quality and access to
services remained unfavorable. The size of
disparities related to race and income
varied widely across the states.
“Every American should have access to
high-quality, appropriate and safe health
care, and we need to increase our efforts to
achieve that goal because our slow progress
is not acceptable,” said AHRQ Director
Carolyn M. Clancy, M.D.
“These AHRQ 2010 State Snapshots not only
provide states with a benchmark on how they
are doing in these areas, but they also
provide resources that states can use to
make improvements.”
The 2010 State Snapshots, an interactive
Web-based tool, show whether a state has
improved or worsened on specific health care
quality measures. For each state and the
District of Columbia, this tool features an
individual performance summary of more than
100 measures, such as preventing pressure
sores, screening for diabetes-related foot
problems and giving recommended care to
pneumonia patients. It also compares each
state to others in its region and the
nation.
Easy-to-read data charts indicate current
strengths, weaknesses and opportunities for
improvement for each state. Health leaders,
insurers, providers, researchers and
consumers can use the State Snapshots data
to examine the extent of health care quality
and disparities in their states and take
steps to address gaps in quality care and
access to services.
The 2010 State Snapshots summarize health
care data by:
• Overall health care quality;
• Type of care (preventive, acute and
chronic);
• Treatment setting (hospital, ambulatory
care, nursing home and home health) ;
• Five clinical conditions (cancer,
diabetes, heart disease, maternal and child
health and respiratory diseases); and
• Strongest and weakest quality measures, as
compared with other states.
A new feature this year is a State Resource
Directory that provides tools and
information on assessing quality measures
and disparities data that states can use to
develop their own health care quality and
disparities measures. Also available are
direct links to AHRQ’s Health Care
Innovations Exchange, a searchable database
in which users can find information and
resources on evidence-based innovations that
others in their states have used to improve
care.
Other highlights include special focus areas
on diabetes, asthma, clinical preventive
services, disparities, health coverage
status and variations over time.
The 2010 State Snapshots are based on data
from the 2010 National Healthcare Quality
Report and National Healthcare Disparities
Report, which are mandated by Congress and
produced annually by AHRQ. Data are drawn
from more than 30 sources, including
government surveys, health care facilities
and health care organizations.
To see the 2010 State Snapshots, go to
http://statesnapshots.ahrq.gov.
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