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Update on progress in electronic reporting of laboratory results to public health agencies - United States, 2014.
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2015
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Ehr SystemsPopulation Health SciencesPublic Health FundUnited StatesClinical EpidemiologyDigital HealthPublic Health PracticeLaboratory ManagementPublic HealthLaboratory MedicineHospital EpidemiologyPatient CareHealth PolicyPublic Health LaboratoriesOutcomes ResearchDisease SurveillanceElectronic ReportingElectronic Health RecordPublic Health PolicyEpidemiologyHealth SystemsHealth DataReal World EvidencePatient SafetyPublic Health AgenciesMedicineHealth Informatics
Since 2010, CDC has provided resources from the Prevention and Public Health Fund of the Affordable Care Act to 57 state, local, and territorial health departments through the Epidemiology and Laboratory Capacity for Infectious Diseases cooperative agreement to assist with implementation of electronic laboratory reporting (ELR)* from clinical and public health laboratories to public health agencies. To update information from a previous report about the progress in implementing ELR in the United States, CDC examined regular communications between the agency and the 57 health departments during 2012-2014. The results indicated that, as of July 2014, 67% of the approximately 20 million laboratory reports received annually for notifiable conditions were received electronically, compared with 62% in July 2013. These electronic reports were received by 55 of the 57 jurisdictions and came from 3,269 (up from nearly 2,900 in July 2013) of approximately 10,600 reporting laboratories. The proportion of laboratory reports received electronically varied by jurisdiction. In 2014, compared with 2013, the number of jurisdictions receiving >75% of laboratory reports electronically was higher (21 versus 14), and the number of jurisdictions receiving <25% of reports electronically was lower (seven versus nine). National implementation of ELR continues to increase and appears it might reach 80% of total laboratory report volume by 2016.