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Fiedler Jay

Description

The MSSS, described elsewhere, has been in use since 2003 and records ED chief complaint data. As of September 2014, there were 88/136 hospital EDs enrolled in MSSS, capturing 83% of the annual hospital ED visits in Michigan.

On April 1, 2014 the Healthy Michigan Plan (HMP) was launched. HMP provides healthcare benefits to low-income adult residents who do not qualify for Medicaid or Medicare. The plan incorporates both federally and state mandated Essential Health Benefits, which includes emergency services.

As insurance coverage expands, more people will have the ability to utilize the services of primary care and other providers. In particular, this will affect previously uninsured, low-income populations who are disproportionately affected by chronic disease.

We question if access to these services will affect the utilization of emergency services as more people will have a medical home to manage and prevent diseases that may otherwise become an emergent issue. Furthermore, this increased access to health care services will expand care options for urgent but not emergent issues beyond EDs. Conversely, as more people acquire health care benefits the demand for primary care services may exceed the level of access to these services which may lead to an increase of ED utilization for primary care.

Objective

The purpose of this work is to use the Michigan Syndromic Surveillance System (MSSS) to assess emergency department (ED) utilization before and after the April 2014 implementation of the Healthy Michigan Plan, an expanded Medicaid program.

Submitted by teresa.hamby@d… on
Description

BioSense 2.0 has become a platform for technical receipt and analysis of syndromic surveillance data for many jurisdictions nationwide, as well as a collaborative effort that has engaged a larger community of syndromic surveillance practitioners, Governance Group, and federal agencies and organizations. The potential longterm benefits of BioSense 2.0 for resource and data sharing have at times been overshadowed by the short-term limitations of the system and disconnected efforts among the CoP. In May 2014, representatives from 41 jurisdictions attended a 2-day, in-person meeting where four workgroups were formed to address on-boarding, data quality, data sharing and syndrome definition in an effort to advance changes that resonate with actual surveillance practice.

Objective

This roundtable will provide a forum for the syndromic surveillance Community of Practice (CoP) to learn about activities of the BioSense 2.0 User Group (BUG) workgroups that address priority issues in syndromic surveillance. It will be an opportunity to discuss key challenges faced by public health jurisdictions in the era of Meaningful Use and identify further needs and best practices in the areas of data quality, data sharing, onboarding, and developing syndrome definitions.

 

Submitted by Magou on