Clinical Data Drives Insight and Innovation to Transform Our Healthcare System

CRISP’s most important use is the direct delivery of important clinical information to doctors, nurses, and other providers to help them give the best possible care to patients. As CRISP handles more and more data each year, the information we manage can also be used to develop insights about clinical outcomes and make healthcare work better for us all. The webpage below provides information on two key programs aimed at supporting the healthcare community: The CRISP Research Initiative and the CRISP Quality Improvement ProgramThese efforts provide access to researchers and healthcare providers to patient data – in identified form for providers with a caring relationship or with patient consent – or in a “limited data set” with basic identifiers like name, address, and medical record number removed to protect patient privacy. These projects allow participants in the CRISP HIE to better optimize processes and the user experience to help increase the likelihood of positive outcomes for patients.

 

Last updated: April 2, 2026

Quality Improvement

As the state-designated health information exchange for Maryland and HIE service providers for Washington, DC, West Virginia, and the Mid-Atlantic region, CRISP works to support various uses of the clinical data flowing through the health information exchange. On May 31st, 2018, The CRISP Clinical Advisory Board approved a use case for CRISP-mediated data to be made available to participating organizations for Quality Improvement (QI) studies as defined under HIPAA.

The Importance of Quality Improvement

Healthcare providers make decisions in collaboration with their patients every day. As much as healthcare delivery is evidence-based, putting that evidence into practice requires significant effort. Did a new service make outcomes better? QI activities help answer that question. For example, many providers are now using the Reports – Pre-Post Report to take advantage of the Maryland Health Services Cost Review Commission’s case-mix data set to look at hospitalization admissions, emergency department visits, and costs related to care for their patients. By comparing these data before and after an intervention, providers can better understand the effectiveness of a new program or service – like adding a diabetes educator to practice or using a new surgical technique. These studies are intended for informing the provider organization and are not approved for general publication.

What We Require

CRISP does not directly approve these projects, but QI activities must be reported to CRISP through the submission of a Quality Improvement Attestation Form to attest that the activity meets the definition of a QI activity under HIPAA and to enable CRISP to audit the activity for appropriate use. CRISP monitors the activities of credentialed users of our tools and services and checks their access using various auditing tools to ensure that an individual user is only searching for appropriate patients on the CRISP network (i.e., they or their delegator has a current care relationship with the patient). In the case of a QI activity, a quality improvement analyst may not have a direct care relationship with the patients they are accessing. We, therefore, require for each QI activity a list of credentialed users who will be accessing data. Participating organizations conducting QI studies must maintain a current list of their patients using one of the several methods CRISP accepts for maintaining a current patient list.

Additional Information

When assessing a patient on the CRISP Query Portal, select “Healthcare Operations” when choosing the purpose for accessing patient data.

Note that Quality Improvement activities do not research under federal law and the CRISP Participation Agreement. If your organization intends to create generalizable knowledge through a study (e.g., publish a paper in a journal), you cannot use the QI attestation process; instead, you should submit a research data use request. More information about this process and the CRISP Research Initiative is available below.

Once completed, please email the signed Quality Improvement Attestation Form to support@crisphealth.org.

CRISP Research Initiative

Research represents the newest permitted purpose (effective April 20th, 2016) for data sharing under the CRISP Participation Agreement. We share data with investigators at participating organizations through a rigorous governance and approval process. Participating organizations include leading health research institutions such as Johns Hopkins Medicine, the University of Maryland Medical System, and the MedStar Research Institute. We supported our first patient‑consented research study in 2017 and have continued to expand the research initiative over time, enabling a broad range of health services, population health, and health policy research.

Access to Data for Research

Research Subcommittee

Approved Use Cases

Approved Data Requests

Information for Researchers

Requesting Data from CRISP

Process Overview

Costs for Research Access

For More Information