Health Disparities in Utilization, Quality, and Outcomes for Three Common Ocular Conditions (HealthDOC) - Project Summary/Abstract: Multiple that minority CHIP of The understood. ophthalmology retinopathy. past studies provide strong evidence that disparities exist in healthcare, i ncluding in ophthalmology, and social determinant of health (SDH) play an important role for explaining differences in ethnic and racial receipt of healthcare. With the passage of the Affordable Care Act and later the Medicare Access and Reauthorization Act of 2015, there has been emphasis on medical quality measures with implementation the Medicare Incentive Payment System (MIPS) with the use of National Quality Forum (NQF) related metrics. association between quality measures for ophthalmic conditions and healthcare disparities is poorly In fact, there has been little research to inform how the social determinants of health impact care practices and quality metrics by racial/ethnic groups with cataract, glaucoma, and diabetic The proposedHealth Disparities in Utilization, Quality, and Outcomes for Three Common Ocular Conditions (HealthDOC) study employing clinically will address prevailing gaps between clinical quality measures and practice by a rigorous health services and outcomes research study design that evaluates ophthalmic NQF, and meaningful measures using the S ight OU tcomes R esearch C ollaborativ E ( SOURCE to study health) disparities. SOURCE links and extracts data across healthcare systems from electronic health records to capture visual changes, clinical details (typically not available but through clinical trials), and health disparities, which is ideal for responding to Healthy People 2030 ocular goals. SOURCE overcomes major data barriers in ophthalmology health disparities work with visual outcome details for measuring treatment, quality, and outcomes, joined with key information on race and ethnicity, the biological variable of gender, SDH measures, medications, hemoglobin A1c, Centers for Disease Control National Death Index Data and others. This study will examine three major eye diseases (cataract, glaucoma, diabetic eye disease) and quantify the impact of SDH on achievement of established and peer reviewed NQF ocular quality metrics, and clinically meaningful measures on visual outcomes, and non-ocular morbidity and mortality for the chronic diseases of glaucoma and diabetic retinopathy. The ocular conditions we focus on are the most common causes of irreversible visual impairment and blindness in the U.S. and fulfills the target goals for National Eye Institute and Healthy People 2030. This on Eye Care Disparities), leveraging states disparities National innovative, 2 stakeholder-driven 3 ) aligned with healthcare management using accepted quality metrics (NQF), and 4 existing data from electronic health records of 27 ophthalmology program sites covering multiple and regions, focused on quality improvement initiatives aimed at future interventions to reduce health across SOURCE sites and abroad. This project aligns well with the missions of the NIH, NEI, and Academy of Medicine (NAM) on reducing health disparities and the prevention of vision loss. study is: 1) ) (American Academy of Ophthalmology, Task Force )