Publication | Open Access
Defining ‘actionable’ high- costhealth care use: results using the Canadian Institute for Health Information population grouping methodology
22
Citations
20
References
2019
Year
Model results point to specific, actionable information within clinically meaningful subgroups to reduce high-cost health care use. Health equity, specifically low socio-economic status, was statistically significantly associated with high-cost use in the majority of health profile sub-groups. Population segmentation methods, and more specifically, the CIHI Population Grouping Methodology, provide specificity to high-cost health care use; informing interventions aimed at reducing health care costs and improving population health.
| Year | Citations | |
|---|---|---|
Page 1
Page 1