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Novel training offered to improve knowledge of Medicaid administrative data

Lady is gold shirt sitting in front of large computer screen

The WVU Health Affairs Institute has launched a robust online Medicaid administrative claims data analysis training, enabling researchers, students and data analysts to develop a better understanding of how to use Medicaid data to identify health trends and associations. 

The data used in the course are fabricated but are designed to simulate real Medicaid data. The data analysis techniques are widely applicable to various states.

Empowering researchers and analysts to better analyze Medicaid administrative data can aid in the improvement of health outcomes in West Virginia, other states and nationally. 

Health Affairs offers two levels of training. A 10-week introductory course and a 12-week advanced course. The introductory course has two start dates, Aug. 14 and Jan. 8. 2024, and the advanced course begins Sept. 4 and Jan. 8, 2024. The advanced course requires completing the introduction or passing a pre-assessment. Space is limited.   

Medicaid is the nation’s largest health insurer, covering more than 93 million Americans or 28% of the country, including one in three West Virginians. Medical providers, pharmacies and hospitals submit millions of claims to Medicaid each year, and that information can be studied to determine trends in health care utilization, how geography impacts service delivery, which services are used by which demographics and communities, and more. 

Although Medicaid records capture valuable information, they are mostly administrative tools that describe health care encounters for billing, not datasets designed for research, which makes interpreting them difficult without properly understanding the data. 

Dr. Shyama Mahakalanda, director of health analytics at WVU Health Affairs Institute, explained that was the reasoning behind developing this training of high quality, detailed course materials. 

“Although transparency and access to Medicaid claims data have increased in the last decade, the knowledge and training of how to utilize that data has remained relatively unchanged,” he said. “We hope this training helps to increase the capacity of analysts to use this data and also leads to more use of Medicaid claims data for public impact research.”

The instructor is Zheng Dai, assistant director of health analytics for the Health Affairs Institute, who earned his doctorate in epidemiology from the WVU School of Public Health. Dai specializes in studying substance misuse and has used Medicaid claims data extensively in his research.

WVU faculty, staff and students get a 50% discount on fees, and West Virginia Department of Health and Human Services employees are eligible to take the course for free.

To get the WVU discount code or to ask about group registration, contact ProEducation@hsc.wvu.edu using your WVU email address.

Learn more about the courses.