Health report card: mixed marks for Utah
Each year the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality publishes its comparison. This year, Utah shared its "strong" designation with Maine, Minnesota, Nebraska, New Hampshire, Rhode Island, South Dakota and Wisconsin. No state earned the "very strong" rating.
Utah compared very favorably in terms of hospital and home health-care measures. It also ranked well in terms of patients safety in the area of obstetric injuries. The state was cited for residents' cost-saving measures in using generic drugs. And the Utah median charge for hospital admission $6,416 is well below even some of its neighbors, including Arizona, Colorado and Nevada.
That's the good news. There's plenty of bad, as well.
The Utah Department of Health summarized the national study in its own report, "Challenges in Utah's Health Care," which is produced biennially to help policymakers identify what's getting worse, what's getting better and what's stable. It found lots of room for improvement, noting that while Utah is classed as strong, it "nearly borders on 'average.'"
We don't do a very good job of getting children to their well-doctor visits. And we do even worse for adolescents.
It says Utah's number of uninsured is going up, patient satisfaction with care for children with chronic conditions is going down and the growth rate in health-care expenditures is higher than national averages.
"This report is welcome because it's humbling," said Dr. David Sundwall, state health director. "We have plenty to do."
Sundwall said he was pleased that Utah moved from above average to strong. But he said he's at a loss to understand why Utah does so poorly in terms of immunizations and screenings.
"We don't take advantage of screening even if it's free or reduced-cost," he said.
But many of the areas that challenge Utah's score are likely to change in the near future, he added. During the last legislative session, the department received more money to take care of kids who are chronically ill. Gov. Jon M. Huntsman led a push for more Children's Health Insurance Program (CHIP) funding, and there will be a new open-enrollment period July 1 for children in families below 200 percent of poverty. That coverage is important because studies show that those with insurance coverage get earlier and more appropriate care. Lawmakers also put in money for early intervention for children with developmental disabilities. All those things will help.




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