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which organization operates seer-medicare

by Marina Bogisich Published 2 years ago Updated 1 year ago
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What is the seer-Medicare data?

Jun 15, 2021 · The Medicare claims files provided as part of SEER-Medicare are described below and reflect input from staff at NCI and CMS. Medicare Provider Analysis and Review (MedPAR) The MedPAR file includes all Part A short stay, long stay, and skilled nursing facility (SNF) bills for each calendar year.

Where do SEER's cancer data come from?

overview of the linked SEER -Medicare data so that users will be able to: 1. Understand how the SEER and Medicare data are combined, their structure, and potential uses 2. Understand how to identify a study population, identify baseline characteristics, and use common inclusion/exclusion criteria 3. Process for obtaining and publishing data. 3

Does NCI pay for seer registry?

The SEER-MHOS database links two large population-based sources of data that provide detailed information about elderly persons with cancer. The data come from SEER's cancer registries that collect clinical, demographic and cause of death information for persons with cancer and the Medicare Health Outcomes Survey (MHOS) that provides information about the health-related …

What is the seer-CAHPS data set?

Dec 10, 2020 · In light of the sensitive nature of the data, maintaining patient and provider confidentiality is a primary concern of NCI, SEER, and Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services. Therefore, the SEER-Medicare data are not public use data files. Investigators are required to obtain approval for specific research questions in order to obtain the data.

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Where does SEER data come from?

SEER has been funded by the NCI since 1973. SEER collects and publishes cancer incidence and survival data from population-based cancer registries covering approximately 48 percent of the U.S. population.

Who reports to SEER?

About SEER SEER coverage includes 42.0 percent of Whites, 44.7 percent of African Americans, 66.3 percent of Hispanics, 59.9 percent of American Indians and Alaska Natives, 70.7 percent of Asians, and 70.3 percent of Hawaiian/Pacific Islanders.

What is SEER healthcare?

The Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program provides information on cancer statistics in an effort to reduce the cancer burden among the U.S. population. SEER is supported by the Surveillance Research Program (SRP) in NCI's Division of Cancer Control and Population Sciences (DCCPS).

What is SEER Medicare database?

SEER-Medicare Linked Database The SEER-Medicare data reflect the linkage of two large population-based sources of data that provide detailed information about elderly persons with cancer, which can be used for an array of epidemiological and health services research.

What states participate in SEER?

About SEER For nine registries (Kentucky, Greater California, Utah, Louisiana, Georgia, New York, Massachusetts, Wisconsin, and Idaho), NCI funds are combined with funding from the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC) through the National Program of Cancer Registries and with funding from the states.

Is SEER publicly available?

De-identified cancer incidence data reported to CDC's National Program of Cancer Registries (NPCR) and the National Cancer Institute's (NCI's) Surveillance, Epidemiology, and End Results (SEER) Program are available to researchers for free in public use databases that can be analyzed using software developed by NCI's ...

What is SEER Explorer?

SEER*Explorer is an interactive website that provides easy access to a wide range of SEER cancer statistics. It provides detailed statistics for a cancer site by gender, race, calendar year, age, and for a selected number of cancer sites, by stage and histology.

Why is SEER important in health information management?

Because SEER provides data suitable for comparative analyses of cases within populations by defined characteristics, it can be used to answer critical questions about racial disparities, effects of new medical practices and changes in etiologic exposures.Dec 1, 2017

What is a SEER registry?

The SEER Program collects and publishes data on cancer incidence and survival population-based cancer registries in 19 U.S. geographic areas.

How do you use SEER data?

Example 1: Create a SEER*Stat Database containing Incidence (NAACCR format) and Population DataStep 1: Get Detailed Descriptions of the Case and Population Input Files. ... Step 2: Prepare your Incidence Data Files. ... Step 3: Prepare your Population Data Files. ... Step 4: Create a Database Description File for Your Database.More items...

How do you cite a SEER?

Citation for SEER*Stat Software The citation including the version number can be seen by selecting Suggested Citations on SEER*Stat's help menu and in print-outs of sessions and results. Surveillance Research Program, National Cancer Institute SEER*Stat software (seer.cancer.gov/seerstat) version .

Announcements

An updated version of the Comorbidity macro is now available that incorporates ICD-10 codes.

Programming Support

Researchers often have questions about the SEER-Medicare data or need help before or during an analysis. You may find the materials provided here to be helpful as you conduct your analyses.

Privacy & Confidentiality Issues

NCI, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, and the SEER staff have great appreciation for the potentially sensitive nature of data about persons with cancer and the need to respect the privacy of patients and providers included in the SEER-Medicare data.

What is Medicare Part B billing?

Since 1991, the Center for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) has collected physician/supplier (Part B) bills for 100 percent of all claims. These bills, known as the National Claims History (NCH) records, are largely from physicians although the file also includes claims from other non-institutional providers such as physician assistants, clinical social workers, nurse practitioners, independent clinical laboratories, ambulance providers, and stand-alone ambulatory surgical centers. The claims are processed by carriers working under contract to CMS. Each carrier claim must include a Health Care Procedure Classification Code (HCPCS) to describe the nature of the billed service. The HCPCS is composed primarily of CPT-4 codes developed by the American Medical Association, with additional codes specific to CMS. Each HCPCS code on the carrier bill must be accompanied by a diagnosis code (ICD9, ICD10), providing a reason for the service. In addition, each bill has the fields for the dates of service, reimbursement amount, encrypted provider numbers (e.g., UPIN, NPI), and beneficiary demographic data.

What is the home health agency file?

The Home Health Agency file contains 100 percent of all claims for home health services. Some of the information contained in this file includes the number of visits, type of visit (skilled-nursing care, home health aides, physical therapy, speech therapy, occupational therapy, and medical social services), diagnosis (ICD-9 or ICD10 diagnosis), the dates of visits, reimbursement amount, HHA provider number, and beneficiary demographic information. An HHA bill may cover services provided over a period of time, not a single day.

Why are some variables not released on SEER?

For reasons of confidentiality, selected variables are not routinely released on the SEER-Medicare files. These variables include the patient's Census tract and ZIP code, as well as the ZIP code for physicians and hospitals. Please review the Privacy and Confidentiality Issues section for more information on these variables.

Is SEER data public?

Therefore, the SEER-Medicare data are not public use data files. Investigators are required to obtain approval for specific research questions in order to obtain the data. The purpose of the approval process is not to critique the methodology or merits of proposed projects, but to ensure the confidentiality of the patients ...

Is SEER data available?

The SEER-Medicare data are available to investigators for research purposes . Although personal identifiers for all patient and medical care providers have been removed from the SEER-Medicare data, there remains the remote risk of re-identification (given the large amount of data available).

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Approval & Processing Time

  • Applications for SEER-Medicare linked data are reviewed by two separate groups, consecutively. The initial review team may provide questions /comments on the project, which will require a response and revision by the investigator. Once the initial review team is satisfied with the appli…
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Changes to Previously Approved Applications

  • Any change to a previous approved application must be approved before any work can begin. Please use the change form (DOCX, 14 KB)to request approval for any change, including changes in data storage.
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Request For Additional Data

  • The 2020 SEER-Medicare linked data are not compatible with any previously released data. Investigators cannot request addition files from previous data releases nor can they combine previously released file years with files released in 2020. In order to add files and/or file years to an application approved prior to 2020, investigators will be required to submit a new application …
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