Skip to main content

For any health profession to succeed in value-based care, there is a critical need to analyze real-time health care data and outcomes among different populations. Where health care once may have lacked real-world data to measure the effectiveness of an intervention, for example, now we simply have too much data to identify a signal in the noise — the pattern in a vast sea of data that can help improve patient outcomes.

Traditional data analytics tools, such as the dashboards in your electronic health records program, can visualize basic trends in the data collected on your patients, benchmark outcomes, and track provider performance based on specific data points. But what they can't do is offer a wholistic view of a patient's health and identify that individual's health risk based on a multitude of factors that interact and change over time.

Enter artificial intelligence, or AI. By analyzing large data sets from electronic health records, claims databases from private payers and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, randomized controlled trials, wearable devices, and even clinical data registries, health services researchers are just beginning to scratch the surface of AI's promise to advance both practice and research.

Log in or create a free account to keep reading.


Join APTA to get unlimited access to content.


You Might Also Like...

News

APTA, Provider and Patient Groups Push Major Reforms to Prior Authorization

Mar 25, 2026

APTA has joined a broad coalition of national provider and patient organizations to release a new policy framework aimed at tackling one of the most persistent

Article

Policy Progress and Patient-First Thinking: Takeaways from the 2026 Maley Panel

Mar 23, 2026

APTA Board member Kelley Kubota, PT, DPT, MS, moderated the John H.P. Maley Clinical Impact Lectureship Award panel featuring William Boissonnault, PT,

Article

APTA Offers Insights on the Strategic Implementation of AI in Health Care to HHS

Mar 18, 2026

In February, APTA submitted comments to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services in response to their Request for Information: Accelerating the