DAILY NEWS CLIP: October 6, 2025

Not All Payers: Is Connecticut’s massive trove of healthcare data useful?


Connecticut Inside Investigator – Sunday, October 5, 2025
By Marc E. Fitch

Since passage of the state budget in 2013, the State of Connecticut has been collecting health data under a program called the All Payer Claims Database (APCD), a massive compendium of medical claims and costs meant to allow consumers, hospitals, insurers, researchers, lawmakers, and state agencies to access that data, gain insights into Connecticut’s healthcare landscape, and help lower the cost of healthcare in the state.

The APCD grew out of the Affordable Care Act under President Barack Obama’s administration, which encouraged healthcare transparency and offered funding to help state officials develop healthcare claim databases. Connecticut received $6.5 million to create the APCD, which was originally housed under the purview of Connecticut’s health insurance exchange where it largely sat dormant until it was transferred to the Office of Health Strategy (OHS) shortly after the agency’s creation in 2018. Under the purview of OHS, the APCD has been getting more attention from researchers, hospitals, and private entities.

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