For the survey, Black Book asked 2,068 long-term and post-acute care providers — including nursing homes, short-term rehabilitation facilities and sub-acute facilities — about their use of health IT. In 2017, 91 percent of post-acute administrators reported they had no budgeted funds for technology acquisitions or improvements.
A minority of inpatient post-acute providers — 19 percent — indicated they had some technological capabilities for EHRs operational in the fourth quarter of 2017. During the same period last year, only 15 percent reported this capability.
Corporate chains and large nonprofit systems represented the post-acute facilities most likely to have adopted EHR capabilities. Thirty-four percent of these organizations had some technological capabilities for EHRs operational in the fourth quarter.
More articles on post-acute care:
Genesis Healthcare warns of bankruptcy after operating challenges in Q3
KLAS: 7 IT vendors ranked by performance in home-care setting
RNs more effectively identify medication discrepancies than LPNs in nursing homes