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      Promises and Pitfalls of Health Information Technology for Home- and Community-Based Services

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          Abstract

          Background: Health information technology (HIT) use in home- and community-based services (HCBS) has been hindered by inadequate resources and incentives to support modernization. We sought to understand the ways the Medicaid Balancing Incentive Program (BIP) facilitated increased use of HIT to increase access to HCBS. Method: Qualitative analysis of interviews with 30 Medicaid administrators, service agency providers, and consumer advocates. Results: Although stakeholders perceived several benefits to greater HIT use, they highlighted critical challenges to effective adoption within the long-term services and supports (LTSS) system, including lack of extant expertise/knowledge about HIT, the limited reach of HIT among rural and disabled beneficiaries, burdensome procurement processes, and the ongoing resources required to maintain up-to-date HIT solutions. Conclusion: The structural reforms required by BIP gave states an opportunity to modernize their HCBS systems through use of HIT. However, barriers to HIT adoption persist, underscoring the need for continued support as part of future rebalancing efforts.

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          Health and aged care enabled by information technology.

          One of the challenges facing health and welfare policymakers as well as researchers in most developed countries is the increasing demand for aging services and aged care. Low birth rates and rapid increases in the percentages of elderly people make aging and aged care one of the top-priority issues among the national agenda of many countries. The responses of governments have included initiatives to extend productive working lives and promote self-funded retirement; to promote healthy, active aging; and to encourage more care to be delivered in home and community settings. Technology will be a major enabler of these strategies. People requiring health services are increasingly being offered more care in their own homes and community settings as an alternative to hospital admission and to delay or avoid moving into institutional care. Research is providing intelligent technology to enable care in the home as well as to monitor safety, security, and quality. Innovation will provide greater independence and better access to care in their own homes for the elderly, sufferers of chronic illness, and persons with disability and reduce the incidence of hospital admissions and the length of stay when admissions do occur. Technologies will support families and professional caregivers and are expected to reduce costs. This paper reports on developments in technology to support care for the aged in home and community settings.
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            Author and article information

            Contributors
            (View ORCID Profile)
            (View ORCID Profile)
            Journal
            Journal of Applied Gerontology
            J Appl Gerontol
            SAGE Publications
            0733-4648
            1552-4523
            May 2021
            July 29 2020
            May 2021
            : 40
            : 5
            : 558-565
            Affiliations
            [1 ]RAND Corporation, Santa Monica, CA, USA
            [2 ]RAND Corporation, Pittsburgh, PA, USA
            [3 ]RAND Corporation, Arlington, VA, USA
            Article
            10.1177/0733464820941364
            32723124
            1960ef13-1b31-4dea-a660-9a7acab93f2c
            © 2021

            http://journals.sagepub.com/page/policies/text-and-data-mining-license

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