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Date: Friday, Dec. 6, 1996
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE	
Contact:  AHCPR Public Affairs, Howard Holland ext. 1374, Salina Prasad  ext. 1317

New Studies Focus on Improving Quality of Care


Health plans, providers and consumers across the United States are the intended beneficiaries of 10 new studies announced today by the federal Agency for Health Care Policy and Research (AHCPR). The studies will help to provide science-based information needed by the public and private sectors to develop tools and information that will lead to improvements in health care quality.

According to Clifton R. Gaus, Sc.D., AHCPR administrator, objective, research-based quality-of-care measures are essential for improving services, balancing costs and quality, and knowing where costs can be reduced without jeopardizing patients' health.

"These studies will benefit consumers in two ways. First, improved quality of care translates into better outcomes; second, it will give consumers objective information on performance -- not just differences in prices -- on which to base their decisions when choosing a health plan or individual treatment facility," said Dr. Gaus.

AHCPR has awarded approximately $13.52 million over five years to fund seven new studies that are collectively known as Q-SPAN (Expanding Quality of Care Measures). These new studies are:

Upon their availability, AHCPR may include quality of care measures produced by the studies in AHCPR's landmark Computerized Needs-Oriented Quality Measurement Evaluation System (CONQUEST) or in CONQUEST's eventual successor, the Quality Measurement Network (QMNet). In addition, AHCPR has awarded approximately $3.23 million to fund three other studies on health care quality. These studies are: