Aligning health information technologies with effective service delivery models to improve chronic disease care.

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2014-08-06
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Abstract
OBJECTIVE Healthcare reforms in the United States including the Affordable Care and HITECH Acts and the NCQA criteria for the Patient Centered Medical Home have promoted health information technology HIT and the integration of general medical and mental health services These developments which aim to improve chronic disease care have largely occurred in parallel with little attention to the need for coordination In this article the fundamental connections between HIT and improvements in chronic disease management are explored We use the evidence based collaborative care model as an example with attention to health literacy improvement for supporting patient engagement in care METHOD A review of the literature was conducted to identify how HIT and collaborative care an evidence based model of chronic disease care support each other RESULTS Five key principles of effective collaborative care are outlined care is patient centered evidence based measurement based population based and accountable The potential role of HIT in implementing each principle is discussed Key features of the mobile health paradigm are described including how they can extend evidence based treatment beyond traditional clinical settings CONCLUSION HIT and particularly mobile health can enhance collaborative care interventions and thus improve the health of individuals and populations when deployed in integrated delivery systems
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Adult, Client, Facility-based health worker, Access to information or data, Delayed reporting of events, Quality of care, Continuity of care, Addressing individual beliefs and practices, Non Experimental, Chronic care, Disease management, Internet, SMS, Voice, Text, Image, Audio
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