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VA Lays Groundwork for Private Care – Nextgov

Posted by timmreardon on 09/16/2014
Posted in: Health Care Costs, Health Care Economics, Health IT adoption, Health Outcomes, Healthcare Delivery, Healthcare Informatics, Healthcare Security, Innovation, Integrated Electronic Health Records, Military Health System Reform, National Health IT System, Patient Centered Medical Home, PCMH, Veterans Affairs. Leave a comment

By Bob Brewin
September 15, 2014
nextgov-medium 3a
The Department of Veterans Affairs plans to outsource issuance and administration of the “Veteran’s Choice Card,” a key provision of legislation signed last month by President Barack Obama that allows veterans to seek health care from private providers outside the Veterans Health Administration network of 950-plus hospitals and clinics.

In contracting documents, VA said a third-party administrator will manage the creation and distribution of the Veteran’s Choice Card, which vets can use to obtain services from private sector clinicians and hospitals as called for in the Veterans Access, Choice and Accountability Act of 2014.

The card will contain the veteran’s name, an identifying number that is not a Social Security number, VA provider contact information and the following language:

‘‘This card is for qualifying medical care outside the Department of Veterans Affairs. Please call the Department of Veterans Affairs phone number specified on this card to ensure that treatment has been authorized.’’

VA said the third-party administrator will also set up a call center to provide education to veterans and providers on program details and respond to veteran and clinician inquiries. The call center will track, monitor and provide reports on veteran use of private health care and manage claims adjudication and payment.

The legislation allows veterans who live more than 40 miles from a VA health facility to seek private care. The choice card database will use that metric to determine whether the veteran can access private care. The database will also estimate the costs of outside care and collect and verify information on other types of health insurance used by veterans.

On Wednesday, VA will hold an industry day to obtain insights on the project at its Denver Acquisition and Logistic Center, which performs supply chain management for VA and other government agencies.

VA Secretary Robert McDonald said in a statement, “We look forward to the opportunity to partner with the private sector to implement this new law and provide veterans with a customer service experience that meets their needs.”

Article Link: http://www.nextgov.com/health/2014/09/va-lays-groundwork-private-health-care/94151/

Bickering Among EHR Vendors, Payers And Providers Continues To Put Patient Safety At Risk – Forbes

Posted by timmreardon on 09/11/2014
Posted in: Health Care Costs, Health Care Economics, Health IT adoption, Health Outcomes, Healthcare Delivery, Healthcare Informatics, Healthcare Security, Innovation, Integrated Electronic Health Records, Mobile Healthcare, National Health IT System, Patient Centered Medical Home, Patient Portals, PCMH, Quadruple Aim, Uncategorized. Leave a comment

Pharma & Healthcare 8/26/2014 @ 1:23PM

Remember that Boston Globe story from July that questioned the safety and efficacy of electronic health records? If you haven’t seen it, I recommend that you check it out, but take a grain of salt with it, since the story neglects to say that the savings and quality gains promised with the $27 billion Meaningful Use EHR incentive program aren’t supposed to be realized until Stage 3, which won’t start before 2017.

One of the people quoted in that article was University of Pennsylvania sociologist Ross Koppel, someone who has long been critical of what he sees as complacency among major health IT vendors. (Essential reading on Koppel is his 2005 report in the Journal of the American Medical Association demonstrating 22 different ways that computerized physician order entry systems can cause or exacerbate medication errors.)

I had a chance to talk to Koppel recently for an article in another publication that should appear shortly after Labor Day. I left out a long discussion we had about a public hearing held while federal officials were in the early stages of development for Meaningful Use Stage 2 requirements, but I’m going to share that here.

Koppel recalled an April 2011 hearing on EHR usability in front of the Health IT Policy Committee‘s workgroup on certification and adoption, a workgroup that included several vendor executives. He was on a panel with University of Maryland computer scientist Ben Shneiderman, an expert in user interfaces.

Shneiderman scoffed at testimony that suggested common EHR user interfaces would be a bad idea. According to a transcript of the meeting, “My greatest concern is the [closed-mindedness] of this industry to discussion.”

Of particular concern is the lack of standardization of terminology, something that remains a problem today. Shneiderman related the story about a physician who got a report saying that a patient had Congolese hemorrhagic fever (sometimes called Crimean-Congo hemorrhagic fever). But the patient didn’t really have that deadly disease. The diagnosis had been improperly coded by someone who didn’t recognize the abbreviation “CHF,” which also stands for congestive heart failure, a common, chronic, treatable condition.

“The change in values, in metrics, and the lack of terminology standardization are really problematic issues,” Shneiderman said. “We’re dealing with medical reconciliation, the names of drugs, the spelling of them and so on. There‘s so much variability because everybody wants their independence. The nature of computerization in almost every field is to come together to make some common ideas, some concepts, workflows and terminology so that people can work together, so that learning times are shortened, so that collaboration that was so important here is facilitated. ”

According to Koppel, vendor representatives essentially argued that usability was not measurable because it was too theoretical.

Shneiderman criticized panel member Carl Dvorak, president and COO of EHR vendor Epic Systems Corp. “
Carl Dvorak, he celebrates the diversity and the product differentiation of competing products, but they’re differentiating on the wrong metrics. If they differentiated on the support of creative diagnostics, I’d be very impressed. But to differentiate by the color of the fonts and last name/first name versus first name/last name and the 35 ways that systolic and diastolic pressure are shown is not creativity. It’s not freedom. It’s just chaos,” Shneiderman said.

Vendors voluntarily report findings on adverse events to the Food and Drug Administration’s Manufacturer and User Facility Device Experience (MAUDE) reporting system. While the reports are made public, they are made anonymously, which frustrates Koppel. “It’s completely voluntary, but completely secret,” Koppel said.

For their part, vendors said insurance companies were partly to blame because they make it hard to access key cost data.

” For example, we heard complaints [at the hearing] about too many clicks to order a mammogram. That may have been bad software design, but it may have been that in that particular case, the payer was putting up a hurdle in front of ordering the mammogram by asking for additional data with an overt intention of discouraging the use of what might have been judged to be an inappropriate test,” Dr. David McCallie, vice president of medical informatics at Cerner CERN -0.43% Corp., said at that 2011 hearing.

“We tried to design an e-prescribing system a few years ago, and one of my goals to the team was to surface to actual cost to the patient out of pocket of the medicines so that the physician could give the patient choices between the various—once a day is going to cost you more than two times a day. We couldn’t get that data; it’s hidden from us. The payers wouldn’t let us get it, so we had to build cumbersomeness into the user interface that, in fact, reflected external constraints,” McCallie said.

There has been more talk lately of price transparency, and more collaboration between payers and providers on making cost data more accessible, but the three-way blame game among payers, providers and vendors continues to this day. Among the losers are taxpayers who are ponying up billions for health IT that so far has been more helpful than harmful, but hardly ideal. But the real losers here are patients, whose safety continues to be at risk.

Article link: http://www.forbes.com/sites/neilversel/2014/08/26/bickering-among-vendors-payers-and-providers-continues-to-put-patient-safety-at-risk/

Interoperability supply and demand – HIE Watch

Posted by timmreardon on 09/05/2014
Posted in: Big Data, Blue Button, Global Standards, Health Care Costs, Health Care Economics, Health IT adoption, Health Outcomes, Healthcare Delivery, Healthcare Informatics, Healthcare Security, Innovation, Integrated Electronic Health Records, Military Health System Reform, Mobile Healthcare, National Health IT System, Open Data, Patient Centered Medical Home, Patient Portals, PCMH, Quadruple Aim, Quality Measures, Veterans Affairs. Leave a comment

  : Mike Milliard, Healthcare IT News Date: Sep 3, 2014 e-mail to a friend

When Micky Tripathi and David McCallie deliver their draft recommendations to the Health IT Policy Committee today, they’ll have some pointed things to say about the JASON report, and its ideas about the state of nationwide interoperability.

Tripathi, CEO of the Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative, and McCallie, senior vice president of medical informatics at Cerner, are co-chairs of the joint HIT Policy and Standards Committee’s JASON Task Force – charged with digesting the report, “A Robust Health Data Infrastructure,” prepared for AHRQ by the MITRE Corporation’s JASON advisory group, and making suggestions to ONC about what to do with its findings.

In a presentation made to their own JASON Task Force on Sept. 2, Tripathi and McCallie offered their perspective about the dense, 69-page report, which assesses the U.S. healthcare’s readiness for widespread and seamless data exchange.

How ready? JASON’s verdict: not very.

In its most recent report, JASON – an autonomous collection of several dozen scientists and academics that has offered advice to federal government on military and technology matters for more than half a century – argues that “the current lack of interoperability among the data resources for EHRs is a major impediment to the effective exchange of health information.”

Tripathi and McCallie note that the JASON process doesn’t allow them to question the report authors for clarification, but based on their inference, they offer the following thoughts:

The report “appears to be recommending a centrally orchestrated, nationwide architecture to resolve incompatibility of individual implementations that exists today.”
It recommends encryption of data and transactions as a critical security feature, “but did not propose any new technologies or measures than are already in use today.”
It refers to the “need for resolving patient identities across implementations as a key barrier to data aggregation,” but doesn’t offer any new ideas for fixing that notoriously thorny issue.
“We believe that JASON seriously underestimates the progress made in interoperability, though we agree that there is considerable room for improvement,” they argue.

“There has been a long time lag since the JASON report was conducted,” write Tripathi and McCallie. “Investigation was conducted in early 2013, but much has changed in the industry in the last 18 months, such as market deployment of Direct-enabled functions, and beginning of MU2 attestations using C-CDA.”

To that point, they argue, “ONC should take into account the current state of interoperability as well as current trends before incorporating JASON findings in any decisions on HIE plans, policies and programs.”

The JASON report “explicitly focuses only on high-level technical architecture and does not address legal, business, policy, federation issues,” they write.

That’s a pretty small-bore lens through which to view this big challenge, says Tripathi, who spoke about the systemic ways interoperability has historically been hampered in the U.S. – understandable, if not excusable – and how those barriers, one by one, look to be falling.

The first small-scale Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative HIE pilots kicked off 10 years ago, in 2004. Where are we now, compared to where you thought we’d be then? Or here’s a shorter question: Why is interoperability so hard?

Up until now there hasn’t been enough demand for interoperability in healthcare. Lack of demand has been a big part of it. A lot of people have the perspective that there has been a negative motivation behind that: people wanting to horde their data and not share it with others because they think they’re going to harvest their most profitable patients, and what have you. I’m sure there’s some of that. But I think there’s a genuine lack of demand for a variety of other reasons.

Some of them are cultural. Physicians aren’t trained to think, ‘I need to get data from other places in order to take better care of my patients.” Both my parents are physicians and they’ll always say that they were never trained that way – almost with the opposite: You got what you got, and you’d better make some good decisions based on what you got. Not, ‘I’d better pause and wait to get more information once it’s critical.’

There’s a financial aspect to it as well, which is just the fee-for-service model. It may be true that some people, if they’re being paid just to do stuff are going to do it, whether it’s needed or not. I’m sure there are certain bad actors who act that way. But I think it’s more a question of investment, and need: If I’m paid just to do more stuff I can try to figure out how to invest in a complex system that I don’t have a lot of control over to try to figure out whether that X-ray was actually done somewhere else in the past six months, and thereby save the system money, or I can just do the X-ray and keep going with the quality care I want to give here. They’re just choosing the path of least resistance.

The other thing I would add is the fragmentation of the industry. If you think about how other industries – almost every other industry in the U.S. – the Department of Commerce does industry concentration numbers, and if you look at what percent of the industry accounts for X percent of all the activity that happens in that industry, and it gives you a measure of its concentration. And it turns out that healthcare, both the demand side – meaning patients and purchasers, like health plans and employers – are very fragmented. And then on the supply side – providers, first and foremost, and hospitals – they’re extremely fragmented as well.

And what that means is the demand that happens in other industries, through the market itself, where you get standardization through consolidation – look at the airline industry, where American in the 1970s developed the Sabre system for reservations and very quickly, because there are relatively few players in the airline industry looked at that and thought, wow, I want to use that too and don’t want to invest in my own, so why don’t I use it and I’ll pay American Airlines for it. Pretty soon you have people coalescing around something, and all it takes is five or 10 organizations to do that.

In retail marketing, when Target and Walmart start to get huge and using IT as a strategic lever, all of a sudden you start to see the industry and supply chains start to coalesce around the standards that they create because they’re so big.

In healthcare, no one’s that big. You might think, well, Aetna’s really big. Well, they’re big nationally, but they’re relatively small in any market. So it’s not like what Aetna does can drive the entire market the way that Walmart does can drive the entire retail department store industry.

Similarly on the supply side, the Mayo Clinic is really big, but they’re pretty small in any market. They’re big in Minnesota, but when you start to look at other places, OK, there’s a Mayo Clinic in Chicago, but they’re 10 percent of all the providers in Chicago or something like that. That’s where you start to have the fragmentation.

So if you’re looking for a model that’s happening in other markets, where you say, if 10 companies got together and agreed on a set of standards – this also happened in banking with ATM transactions and stuff, if 10 companies got together and decide on a set of things, and it covers 70 percent of the market, the other 30 percent will follow along.

We don’t have that in healthcare. If you wanted to get the set of provider organizations that account for 50 percent of all patient transactions, there are hundreds and hundreds of organizations it would take.

That’s a market impediment. But I think that dynamic has changed.

Why, and how so?

Meaningful use was obviously a big driver in changing that. To me, the one market player that’s the counterexample to everything I was just saying is Medicare and Medicaid. Leave aside that they happen to be owned by the government – they’re big health insurers, and they’re the only ones who are big enough to move the market. That’s true for ICD-10, it’s true for CPT codes, it’s true for every other thing in healthcare. Medicare and Medicaid tend to be huge drivers because they’re so big in the market, not because they’re the government, necessarily.

And so when they started to embark on MU, and said, when you start doing this stuff, we’ll give you an incentive to do it, they like Walmart are so big in the industry that all of a sudden it started to move the industry in a new direction. That was the incentive to change the way people start thinking about this. Everyone starts to have EHRs, which is essential to interoperability: You can’t talk on telephones if everyone doesn’t have a telephone.

Meaningful use Stage 1 completely changed that. Within a span of three to four years you (go from) 10-15 percent of physicians on EHRs to approaching 70 percent of them having EHRs.

Accountable care is starting to create this culture where, if you do that extra MRI, the ACO is going to be on your back saying, ‘Wait a minute, that was actually available in one of our partner hospitals, and you should have known that before ordering that expensive test.

It’s not widely penetrated across the entire market, but I think in certain markets it’s starting to change the way providers think about those purchase decisions. And that leads to demand for health information exchange. We’re starting to see more and more organizations saying, ‘I can’t possibly meet this risk contract. I’m bearing the risk of costs being greater than a certain amount, if I don’t have the ability to first off have information, which requires interoperability, and second the the ability to act on it.’

From my perspective there are some cultural dynamics that are pretty powerful going on as well. The next generation of physicians are all on iPhones and streaming Spotify and on Snapchat. Increasingly when I talk to them they have an expectation that this is about to happen. And they’re increasingly unwilling to go into settings that aren’t having something that at least has a glimmer of Facebook-like personality and interoperability. They appreciate that there are privacy and security concerns that prevent a complete Facebook openness, but there’s an expectation on the provider side. It just takes time for the older generation to leave and the newer generation to come in. I think they’re starting to make their voices heard from the bottom up.

It’s happening on the patient side, too. It takes a while, but increasingly we’re seeing – and maybe this is a bit ahead of the pack, but I don’t know how much – your expectation that you can get on websites and make reservations and do other stuff but not be able to do that in healthcare, there seems to be increasing demand for that.

Maybe we should take some satisfaction of where we are today, then. When you were doing those initial pilots in Newburyport and Brockton in 2004, did you envision we’d be where we are today?

I think the HIE story is a really good story now. Not because we’ve accomplished more. If I look back on my 2004 self, I would have thought that in 10 years we’d be further along than we are now. On the other hand, I guess I feel really good about it because I think a lot of what happened, especially with the HITECH dollars – and our pilot project showed this too, but that was just a microcosm or a harbinger or what the national experience was later – is that this isn’t a money problem or a technology problem.

If you give people money – we had $50 million for our pilot projects, CMS giving $25 to $30 billion – we can throw money at it, buy technology for people, put it in their offices, and then find that they still don’t do it because there are so many barriers to it: cultural, legal, policy barriers – and workflow barriers.

If you look at how innovation happens in any industry, it often starts with product innovation, where people have fancy, cool new toys that get put out in the market. But there’s been a lag: a bump up in product innovation – and then there’s this real lull because process innovation has to take over to really incorporate those new products.

We’re seeing that in healthcare. We have the capability for Direct messaging now, but it still doesn’t work to the satisfaction of most people. It’s not because the technology isn’t in front of them, it’s because the market ecosystem, which is about process innovation, hasn’t fully developed to create that ability for networks to talk to each other.

Telephone networks and power grids, same sort of challenges. Now we’re just at the beginning of the market trying to figure out how to put these pieces together. The pieces are all distributed – and that’s a good thing – but it takes a while now to figure out how to put all this together.

Even in these places where Direct is working, like the Massachusetts state HIE has hundreds of thousands of transactions a month, one of the things we’re finding is that people are comfortable being senders – I have my secure email and I’m happy to send. Part of that is because MU is incenting you to send, with the 10 percent transition of care summary, but they also feel comfortable sending.

What organizations are not comfortable with doing is receiving the information. They don’t know what to do with it when it comes through that channel because they’re so used to getting it via fax.

Mass General has literally thousands of providers with all these processes designed to protect patients from safety events and deliver good care. It’s not easy to say to all those people, ‘We’re going to flip over to email, starting tomorrow.’ They have a lot of finely crafted – and arcane – but yes, finely crafted processes that track information in certain ways.

Direct was billed as a relatively simple solution, but is so much harder in practice than many people might have thought. Are you surprised?

Yeah, I am. And maybe I’m just admitting my own naïveté here. But yeah, whenever we start to make this kind of change I think it’s generally true that we probably under-appreciate the complexity of what seem to be small changes. Because the industry is so fragmented, it’s hard to get that kind of coordination. If there was just a Walmart and a Target that accounted for 60 percent of all of healthcare, things would be a lot easier. You could get Walmart and Target to talk to each other via Direct, and then the other 40 percent would come along. But it’s so fragmented that the networks are emerging organically and there are literally hundreds of them. Trying to figure out how they fit together is part of the challenge.

I was studying the telephone industry. At the turn of the last century there were something like 2,000 telephone networks in the U.S. alone. It took decades for them to come together so you could have seamless hubs across the networks. There were lots of local exchanges, but long-distance – one exchange to another – took a while to figure out. It’s the same thing here. ONC is going to hopefully play a much bigger role here trying to facilitate that. But if it’s not coming from at least strong parts of the market, it’s not like the government can do anything that will be long lasting. In our economy it’s gotta be market-based, at the end of the day.

The other example I would give is look at the one area of healthcare where there is concentration: namely, pharmacies. And interoperability works great there. E-prescribing is the runaway success of interoperability. How did that happen? Well, basically, the retail pharmacies formed an oligopoly. You have Walgreen’s, CVS, Rite-Aid and Duane Read and a few others. It’s fewer than 10 retail pharmacies and fewer than 10 PBMs and that accounted for the vast majority of the prescribing market. They get together and say, We’re going to create a network among ourselves. It will be a proprietary network, and it’s a runaway success. It’s now the national standard for how prescribing happens. I’m not advocating monopoly (laughs), but sometimes there’s a benefit to that. It’s the one place in healthcare where it did happen, on its own, without the government having to get involved.

What is the mandate of the the JASON task force?

The JASON Report was inspired by a couple things. Well, there are two pieces to it: what was the original question that was asked of them, and what was their motivation as they started to look at it. The JASON process is sort of highly-structured. And somewhat, I don’t want to say secretive, but designed to bring together experts where the individuals aren’t identified. It’s not like I, or David McCallie, who’s co-chair of the JASON task force, have conversations with individuals who contributed to the report. We literally don’t know who those individuals are.

But the original question that was asked of them by the federal government was really to look at the ability for health information exchange to contribute to a platform or platforms to be able to do better research, to improve healthcare. It was very focused, the original question was focused on that: If it can help with clinical care, great, but it was really focused on this question of how can it help to enable research.

But then, I think, if you read the report, you see one of the things they look at and are struck by, which I think most people would agree with, is that, jeez, interoperability really isn’t very far along. It’s really not where any of us really hoped it would be. I think that that’s an observation that resonates with people: Its unsatisfactory, in many ways, where we are right now.

So they came up with a proposed architecture and proposed approach for thinking about how one might enable a way for a nationwide approach, to have an ability to aggregate and normalize information, such that it can be used for clinical care, used for research, and used in a better way by patients to manage their own care.

So that’s roughly what the JASON report was about and the solution they proposed. We’ve got the task force now that is looking at it, and we’re still in the middle of our deliberation, but I think one of the things we’ve talked about on the public workgroup calls is a sense that, in terms of the overall perspective of the JASON authors that, ‘Yeah, we’re not as far along as we’d like to be. There’s is a sense, though that there’s probably more progress in various types of health information exchange than the JASON authors seem to give credit for.

Some of that may have to do with timing. They were asked to start on this almost two years ago. There’s a long lag in the process – they put together the committee and embark on their investigation and they issue their report and the government approves the report, then decide to release it. They started thinking about this two years ago, and only now are we seeing the report. So it may be that they didn’t have the opportunity, because a lot has happened over the past two years, to be able to accurately reflect the current status.

So I think there’s more progress than they give credit for.

Where are some of these pockets of success?

If you look a the Massachusetts statewide HIE, which had hundreds of thousands of transactions a month, among providers sending to quality data warehouses like ours and others, that’s growing every month. And providers pay for those services. If you go into Rochester or Albany, or Indianapolis, or Cincinnati, there are, alive and well, health information exchange organizations where people are actually doing the things the JASON authors would like us to do as a country. They didn’t seem to give credit to places where that was actually going on.

We want something across the country, and to be available nationwide. Which they properly point out has not happened. And, I think, they properly point out that there is no top-down roadmap. And they’re trying to suggest a bit of how to do that.

So as we dive into it more, we’re now in the middle of taking a lot of comments, we’ve had a lot of listening sessions and a wide variety of perspectives on the current state of interoperability. I think one of the challenges as we think about the JASON approach is how do we take what they seem to be recommending – as I said, the authors are anonymous and there’s no opportunity to go and ask them questions, and the report is relatively short, although very well-written and concise – but in something as complex as this, we don’t have the opportunity to go back and ask, “What did you mean by this, it’s not clear.’ You just have to interpret what you get from that.

But I think there is something of a question: it seems to suggest a single architecture for the entire country, and I don’t think that’s something that was in the minds of the JASON authors. As we look at a country as complex and heterogeneous as ours, it’s clear that there is no single solution that will work in Arizona and in Massachusetts. Those are going to be perhaps different types of architectures, perhaps different types of exchange activities that happen within those markets. And I shouldn’t even draw it on state boundaries, because healthcare spills across borders, but in different parts of the country you’re going to see different things happening.

So that’s one challenge, to figure out how to interpret what seems to be a single architecture in a very complex economy that probably can’t have a single architecture like that.

The other thing that they noted is they listed a whole bunch of challenges to having better interoperability, and they noted legal obstacles, business obstacles, policy obstacles, cultural obstacles. They pointed out a number of those, and then they explicitly said, “We recognize those are obstacles, but we’re not going to talk about them in our report, because we’re focused on the technical side.”

But a lot of the challenges we’ve seen in interoperability haven’t been about the technology. They’ve been about all these other things. To the point that the JASON report focused on the technology piece of things, that’s great, and there’s probably some valuable pieces to that, but if you consciously don’t address things that a number of us would probably say are very important pieces, you’re only getting more of the story.

So your role is to digest all this and then recommend to ONC what sort of strategy they should take in implementing their suggestions.

The JASON report had some specific recommendations for ONC. There’s a long list of them. We’ll sort of take the structure of having some comments on their observations, just to make sure we have a sense of, here is their empirical view of the world, and do we agree with that? We want to make sure we say, if there’s any disagreement we have as a task force, with some of their empirical observations, let’s make those clear. And as I said, we think there are some places where they didn’t give enough credit to what is going on. Those are the kinds of things we may want to point out.

And then in the recommendations, we’ll go down and have comments on a number of the recommendations. Some we’ll agree with, some we’ll disagree with, some we’ll remain silent on. And then there are some recommendations that are specific to ONC: that within 12 months ONC should come up with a blueprint for the JASON architecture. Those are the types of things we might provide a little advice on the feasibility of that.

After we brief the policy and the standards committees (this week and next) there will be a joint meeting of the policy and the standards committees and we’ll be making our final recommendations at that meeting.

Article link: http://www.hiewatch.com/perspective/interoperability-supply-and-demand?mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRonuKzOZKXonjHpfsX57e4qUaaylMI%2F0ER3fOvrPUfGjI4AT8pmI%2BSLDwEYGJlv6SgFQ7LHMbpszbgPUhM%3D

10 things DoD wants in its next EHR – Government Health IT

Posted by timmreardon on 09/03/2014
Posted in: Big Data, Blue Button, DoD, Global Standards, Health Care Costs, Health Care Economics, Health IT adoption, Health Outcomes, Healthcare Delivery, Healthcare Informatics, Innovation, Integrated Electronic Health Records, Military Health System Reform, Mobile Healthcare, National Health IT System, Patient Centered Medical Home, Patient Portals, PCMH, Quadruple Aim, Quality Measures, U.S. Air Force Medicine, U.S. Army Medicine, U.S. Navy Medicine, Veterans Affairs. Leave a comment

September 02, 2014 | Government Health IT Staff

Ending months of anticipation, the U.S. Department of Defense (DoD) released its official request for proposals to modernize its Electronic Health Records (EHR) system and enable the DoD to share health data with the private sector and the Department of Veterans Affairs.

The massive and ambitious project, called DoD Healthcare Management Systems Modernization (DHMSM), could cost as much as $11 billion and, Department officials hope, transform the DoD into a national healthcare technology leader.

Major technology companies and consultanices, among them IBM, HP, Computer Sciences Corp., and Epic Systems, have been gearing up and forming alliances for months to prepare to enter the RFP. The sense is that that DHMSM is more than a healthcare RFP, but a transitional step that will determine much of the future for for IT in healthcare.

So what exactly is the DoD looking for in its next EHR?

That list is really long. So here are 10 requirements that demonstrate what the department is looking for:

1. Support clinical data exchange requirements with Department of Veterans Affairs and other external healthcare providers to enable the exchange of health data.
2. Integrate and present data from multiple disciplines (e.g. Radiology, Immunization, Lab) in a single view that allows access by both clinicians and patients.
3. Leverage existing hosting and network infrastructure to the greatest extent possible (not including new hardware related specifically to the EHR System application).
4. Provide access to a longitudinal medical record for each beneficiary that is globally available across all time zones (24/7/365) and across the full range of military operations
5.  Meet or exceed all requirements through configuration with minimal development and maximum utilization of existing infrastructure resources.
6. Utilize government-provided Tier 1 enterprise datacenter hosting and network services.
7. Centralize enterprise functions into common government approved hosting environments (e.g., data warehouse, user web portal, business interfaces).
8. Implement a cybersecurity strategy capable of continuous monitoring to evaluate the system compliancy, and provide interoperable, secure, and operationally effective information exchanges to enable a Net-Centric military capability in compliance with DoD Instruction.
9. Utilize and provide open and standardized application program interfaces (APIs) enabling open access to the data and data model.
10.  Ensure 100 percent compliance with HIPAA and with the Privacy Act of 1974 as amended; comply with the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, Feb 17, 2009; support compliance with nationally recognized health industry standards, and enable compliance with the DoD Information Technology Standards Registry.

The DoD said that, when fully operational, DHMSM will support the health care needs of DoD’s current population of 9.6 million beneficiaries and — particularly if they succeed in exchanging patient data with the VA and private sector providers — the modernization project’s impact may reach across the entire healthcare industry.

“Ultimately,” DoD executive officer Christopher Miller explained, “program success will result in continued improvement in patient safety, quality of care and readiness of forces worldwide.”

Article link: http://www.govhealthit.com/news/10-things-dod-wants-its-next-ehr?topic=32&mkt_tok=3RkMMJWWfF9wsRonuaTJZKXonjHpfsX57uslWKOzlMI%2F0ER3fOvrPUfGjI4AT8RgI%2BSLDwEYGJlv6SgFQ7LHMbpszbgPUhM%3D

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iEHR redefined: DOD’s top 3 tactics in VA turf war detente

ONC advisers pinpoint HIE problems – Fierce Health IT

Posted by timmreardon on 09/02/2014
Posted in: Big Data, Blue Button, DoD, Emergency Medicine, Global Standards, Health Care Costs, Health Care Economics, Health IT adoption, Health Outcomes, Healthcare Delivery, Healthcare Informatics, Healthcare Security, Innovation, Integrated Electronic Health Records, Open Data, Patient Centered Medical Home, Patient Portals, PCMH, Quadruple Aim, Quality Measures. Leave a comment

August 28, 2014 | By Dan Bowman

The governance subgroup of the federal government’s Health IT Policy Committee this week pinpointed problems in the health information exchange ecosystem based on several factors, including severity and commonness, the impact on private and secure exchange and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT’s ability to solve such problems.

Among the top issues causing negative impacts on HIE quantity, the group identified an inconsistency in laws for sharing protected health information, varying approaches to DirectTrust accreditation and varying patient matching standards among providers and other data intermediaries.

Key issues impacting the private and secure exchange of electronic health information included inconsistent encryption efforts for data in motion and the ability to determine the status of a data requester as it pertains to treatment of a patient.

Five problems the group said it thinks would benefit from new governance, policies, programs or recommendations from ONC included:

  1. Inconsistent identification proofing practices for data users
  2. Varying patient matching standards and methods
  3. Varying approaches for how data holders should respond to queries
  4. No minimum standard of authentication practices for access to electronic data
  5. Too many trust bundles tied to differing trust/security policies

At a prior meeting on Aug. 15, provider and vendor representatives in the subgroup discussed looming interoperability issues from technological, business and governance vantage points. Carl Dvorak, president of Verona, Wisconsin-based EHR vendor Epic, said that at least one factor limiting health data exchange is HIEs forcing participants to pay full fees for individual services, such as access to public health and immunization registries.

Dvorak also called for the creation of a national phone book of exchange-ready providers, simple and affordable trust validation service and straightforward “rules of the road” to improve interoperability.

ONC is in the process of crafting an interoperability roadmap, which stems from ideas shared in a vision paper published in June. A draft of the roadmap is due in October, while a more robust version that includes feedback from ONC’s health IT policy and standards committees will be available for public comment by January 2015.

Version 1.0 of the roadmap, which officials say will be a “living document,” is anticipated to be ready by March 2015.

To learn more:
– listen to the Aug. 26 meeting
– download the accompanying slides

Article link: http://www.fiercehealthit.com/story/onc-advisers-pinpoint-hie-problems/2014-08-28?utm_content=bufferc81e7&utm_medium=social&utm_source=twitter.com&utm_campaign=buffer

You Think Financing U.S. Health Care Is Bizarre? Check Out 340B Drug Pricing – Forbes

Posted by timmreardon on 08/27/2014
Posted in: Health Care Costs, Health Care Economics, Health IT adoption, Health Outcomes, Healthcare Delivery, Healthcare Informatics, Innovation, Integrated Electronic Health Records. Leave a comment

Guest post written by Uwe Reinhardt

Mr. Reinhardt is the James Madison Professor of Political Economy at the Woodrow Wilson School at Princeton University.

Ms. Sally Pipes’ latest post is the most recent installment in a long–running debate over the U.S. government’s 340B drug pricing program, which requires drug manufacturers to provide drugs to certain health-care facilities at significantly reduced prices. It throws into sharp relief the truly bizarre ways by which we finance health care in this country. Let me count these ways.

  1. Over half a century’s tenacious wrangling over universal health insurance makes clear our reluctance to extend comprehensive health insurance to millions of lower-income Americans who cannot afford the premiums for such coverage. On average, these uninsured receive about half the health care similarly situated insured Americans receive.
  2. At the same time, however, we cling to the self-flattering notion that we are the most generous people on earth, a proposition we never hesitate to proclaim to the rest of the world.
  3. To reconcile that felicitous self-image with our resistance to universal health insurance, we have constructed a health-care financing system so convoluted that it probably would not have occurred even to Rube Goldberg.
  4. For starters, we allow our providers of health care – doctors, hospitals, pharmaceutical companies and other providers—to use classic price discrimination in the markets for their products and services. That tactic helps sellers to extract from buyers with different abilities or willingness to pay as much total revenue as can possibly be extracted from the buyers collectively.
  5. We further have allowed hospitals and other providers of health care to enhance their revenue gathering prowess by allowing them to consolidate their market power through mergers. The Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs), encouraged by the Affordable Care Act (ACA), may well speed this process of consolidation.
  6. Many states go yet further by protecting the economic turf of existing facilities through Certificate-of-Need (CON) laws designed to deter entrance into the market of would-be competitors. This idea resembles the taxi medallions issued by New York City to control the number of taxis, but also to enhance their market power.
  7. The result of all these policies is that, on average, the prices of health-care services and products in this country tend to be significantly higher—often two to three times higher—than the prices of those same products and services on other industrialized countries. It can explain why per capita health spending in the U.S. in  purchasing power parity dollars also is about twice as high as it is in most other industrialized nations.
  8. Now, because the providers of health care in this country can extract so much revenue from the rest of society, the thought occurred to us that overall they should have enough moolah to operate for the low-income uninsured an informal, not directly compensated catastrophic health insurance system whose entry portal is the emergency department of hospitals. As President George W. Bush noted in 2007, “People have access to health care in America. After all, you just go to an emergency room.” In 2012, presidential candidate Mitt Romney offered similar advice.
  9. Indeed to make sure that hospitals do operate this catastrophic insurance system in case of life threatening illness, President Reagan in 1986 signed into law the Emergency Medical Treatment and Labor Act (commonly known as EMTALA) requiring hospitals to render patients stabilizing emergency services, including active labor, regardless of patients’ ability to pay.
  10. Alas, for the providers of health care, the state-based Medicaid programs have played the classic price-discrimination game that characterizes U.S. health care as any large buyer with market power in a local market would: they buy health care for Medicaid beneficiaries at prices well below fully allocated costs (including allocated fixed costs), but above the marginal cash costs of treating the low-income uninsured, so that at the margin Medicaid patients still do bring in a positive cash flow even if they don’t cover fully allocated costs. From time to time, the federal Medicare program exploits its market power that way as well.
  11.  Because hospitals with a disproportionately large clientele of Medicaid and uninsured patients find it hard to make ends meet in this price-discriminatory game, Congress and state governments have paid them, through the back-door, so to speak, so-called disproportionate-share (DSH) monies to help them defray the marginal cost of treating these patients.
  12. Teaching hospitals that tend to treat large numbers of Medicaid and uninsured patients receive additional allowance for graduate medical education (GME), although economic theory suggests that there is actually no warrant to support GME in this way.
  13. Finally, to help these financially pressed hospitals and other facilities with many Medicaid- and uninsured patients cope with the high prices of pharmaceutical products, Congress saw fit in 1992 to pass the above mentioned 340B drug pricing program, signed into law by President Bush the Elder. The program is ostensibly designed to lower the marginal cost of treating low-income uninsured and Medicaid patients, but, apparently, the law was written loosely enough to permit hospitals to sell the heavily discounted drugs at large markups to commercially insured patients. Hospitals argue, however, that any profits so garnered are recycled to fund their informal catastrophic health insurance program for the poor and to treat Medicaid patients.
  14. Depending on the state, there are still other back-door forms of financing distressed hospitals to make the system work. 13.  Altogether, the highly complicated cash flow resulting from this strange system of financing, flowing through so a myriad of capillaries, makes it almost impossible to hold any providers formally accountable for all of the moneys they receive.

Somehow this rickety Rube Goldberg contraption of financing health care has worked in some fashion in this country, for over half a century. Many hospitals have thrived financially under it, while hospitals located in mainly low-income areas have struggled or gone under. And as a series of journalists—most recently Steve Brill in “The Bitter Pill”—have reported, this system also has put brutal financial stress on the budgets of many American households.

If one explains this financial scheme to foreigners, their reaction invariably is two fold: first, blank stares that express incredulity, then smiles expressing vague amusement.

In her recent post, Ms. Pipes puts the blame for the alleged misuse by hospitals of the 340B drug price program on government for its lack of oversight of all hospitals receiving these funds. Oversight is needed, she seems to assume, because one just cannot trust hospitals to do the right thing.

Alas, better oversight inevitably implies more civil servants traipsing through hospitals and clinics, there to rummage around in patients’ files, auditing internal cash flows and imposing penalties for perceived misbehavior. Such a policy, of course, would trigger outcries over overbearing government intrusions into the private sector. And so it goes, as Kurt Vonnegut might say.

Indeed, it can be said that in no other country is as much oversight necessary—and performed—as it already is in the U.S. Here hospitals spend hundreds of millions, possibly billions, every year to be in compliance with government regulations, and government auditors and the Inspector General’s offices cost hundreds of millions more. Every U.S. hospital now has some executive vice president in charge of compliance, has a board subcommittee dealing with compliance and has a sizeable compliance department and confidential hotline for whistle blowers. There are a growing number of compliance consulting firms helping hospitals and clinics to remain in compliance with U.S. federal and state regulations, earning a fine living from the process—all at patients’ expense, of course. I have never encountered anything like it in other countries whose health systems I have studied.

But, weird and cumbersome as it is, this financing scheme seems to be the system we American prefer. After all, we have kept it in place for many decades now and we only make it more complicated with every passing year, to the point that invites all manner of untoward behavior, notwithstanding the huge sums we already spend on compliance.

And we never cease to proclaim to anyone else in the world still willing to listen that ours is the best health system in the world, bar none. So, mazel tov, my friends! Enjoy.

Article link: http://www.forbes.com/sites/theapothecary/2014/08/21/you-think-financing-u-s-health-care-is-bizarre-check-out-340b-drug-pricing/

 

Inside the struggle for electronic health record interoperability – Fedscoop

Posted by timmreardon on 08/22/2014
Posted in: Blue Button, DoD, Global Standards, Health Care Costs, Health Care Economics, Health IT adoption, Health Outcomes, Healthcare Delivery, Healthcare Informatics, Healthcare Security, Innovation, Integrated Electronic Health Records, Military Health System Reform, Mobile Healthcare, National Health IT System, Open Data, Patient Centered Medical Home, Patient Portals, PCMH, Quality Measures. Leave a comment

By Greg Otto · Wednesday, August 20, 2014 · 5:08 pm – See more at: http://fedscoop.com/ehr-interoperability-stage-2-meaningful-use/view-all/#sthash.nlk5EYZz.dpuf

It is a growing issue everywhere from the examination table in your physician’s office to your hospital system’s database to the halls of Capitol Hill. The health care system at large is trying to move your health record off of a paper chart and into the digital space. Furthermore, your electronic health record (or EHR in health care parlance) should be able to to freely move between your physician to your hospital or anywhere crucial in between. Only that increasingly isn’t the case.

Over the past few months, stories have popped up chronicling doctors’, clinicians’ or other health care providers’ headaches moving to and/or accessing EHRs. The chorus of complaints has led the Senate Appropriations Committee to submit language in a draft bill that calls for a report from the Department of Health and Human Services’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) on what “the challenges and barriers” are to EHR interoperability.”

Whatever challenges and barriers there are, it is clear both hospitals and office-based physicians are struggling to meet HHS’ Meaningful Use Criteria, which include interoperability guidelines.

Small clinics suffer

In a study published in the September 2014 issue of Health Affairs, a number of analysts — including some working for ONC — found that while the rates of hospitals adopting basic EHRs continue to rise, only 5.8 percent of hospitals surveyed were able to meet all of 16 core objectives put forth in HHS’ Meaningful Use Criteria. The areas in which hospitals were most lacking were providing patients with the ability to view and download their information and sending care summaries between care settings.

In another study that examined EHR adoption in office settings, only four in ten physicians had any electronic exchange with other health providers, and one in seven exchanged clinical data with providers outside their organization.

Both studies found that in some respects, the more resources available to a hospital or an office, the more likely they were to have already implemented EHRs. In the study that focused on hospitals, more than half of all rural hospital respondents said they had “less than basic” EHR implementation in 2013. In the study dedicated to office-based care, solo practitioners and specialty physicians lagged behind larger practices or primary care physicians.

The lag is something ONC has tried to combat since the passage of the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, which was part of 2009′s American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The act, which designated $30 billion to build a nationwide system of electronic health records, established 62 Regional Extension Centers (RECs) to provide guidance to local health care providers.

The RECs have been beneficial on the local level. According to ONC, as of July 2013, more than 70,000 providers had demonstrated some form of meaningful use. However, as the hospital-based survey states, the RECs’ efforts are not enough to combat the lag in meeting meaningful-use standards.

Anita Somplasky, the director of measures and support at Quality Insights, a nonprofit health care company that serves as a REC in Pennsylvania, agrees that the cards are stacked against smaller practices who are trying to meet the requirements of meaningful use.

“Small and medium practices are absolutely struggling,” Somplasky said, adding that trying to meet meaningful use standards has been a “slow, slow process.”

Somplasky said she has been dealing with EHR interoperability issues for years, including one that would have allowed more than 900 providers to send secure emails to one another. But three years went by before a solution was provided by vendors.

Even with ONC and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services delivering marching orders for providers to follow, Somplasky said smaller practices are considering taking the financial penalties that come with failing to meet the HHS meaningful use goals.

“Here in Pennsylvania, folks have to pay the state to do syndromic surveillance (the analysis of medical data to detect or anticipate disease outbreaks) or for the immunization registry,” Somplasky says. “That’s $4,000. If the penalty is $3,000, why would I pay $4,000 to login to the state and then another $4,500 for the patient portal? That’s just the unfortunate financial reality.”

Even small practices that have seen the first-hand upside of EHRs still have to create workarounds so their systems can communicate with others outside of their practice.

Mary Beth Byrnes, who helps manage a four-person family practice in Souderton, Pennsylvania, was an early adopter of EHRs, integrating SOAPware into her practice in 2005. Even as Byrnes invests heavily as updates roll out, she said she still has to create workarounds in order to stay on top of patient records.

Byrnes told FedScoop that while she can pull information from other sites, she’s not able to make lab orders electronically. She also said her reporting capability within SOAPware is not very robust, causing her to create a workaround to where she will manually submit queries to obtain data.

While Byrnes said this doubles her workload when working with the program, she needs to do it in order to keep up with any updates SOAPware will roll out in the future.

“Especially as a solo practice, if we don’t get on top of this, we might as well pack it up, close down and go home,” Byrnes said.

Dr. Jorge Schierer, chief medical information officer for Pennsylvania-based Reading Health System, understands that small practices like Byrnes’s face bigger hurdles than large hospitals or health systems.

“The smaller the practice is, the harder it is to do all the things that you need to do to be successful,” Schierer said. “The expense of purchasing, maintaining and optimizing electronic medical records is not insignificant. It’s not offset significantly enough by the potential dollars that you could capture from meaningful use.”

When the code should say ‘codeine’

Even with all of the burdens small practices have to overcome to meet meaningful use standards, Cathy Costello, a program manager for CliniSync, an Ohio-based regional extension center, said more could be done by all parties involved to fix interoperability problems.

“Interoperability requires ‘two to tango,’ Costello wrote in an email to FedScoop. “You can’t send [an email] to yourself and meet the interoperability standards. Although the vendors may provide the technical underpinnings for interoperability, I have yet to meet a vendor who goes out into the community and knocks on doors to make sure the receiving party is set up to accept a transmission of a transition of care document.”

Dr. Jon White with the Department of Health and Human Services’ Agency for Health Research and Quality said vendors should apply more effort in making sure providers are fully satisfied with their products.

“In general, making sure the user experience is the best it can possibly be may not have been the highest priority for the vendors,” White said.

While White said there is “a lot of ground to cover” when it comes to interoperability, he has talked with many doctors or health care systems that love how far EHRs have come over the past decade.

“Some of the most ardent skeptics have said to me that the system we have now is in many ways better than the system we had,” White said. “In a lot of ways, we do have interoperability now. I think what people are struggling with is that the interoperability we have now doesn’t match the ideal of what we all conceive it to be. My gold standard is not going to be the same as other people’s gold standard.”

There have been recent studies that disagree with White’s sentiments on interoperability. A study published in late June in the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association found that EHR systems that have been certified for meaningful use aren’t always interoperable with other EHR systems.

The study found common errors in data that were fed into Consolidated Clinical Document Architecture (C-CDA) documents, which allow data to move through EHR systems. Some of the errors included incorrect dosage data or codes used in systems that confused penicillin for codeine.

“Data heterogeneity or omissions may impose a minimal burden in cases where humans or computers can normalize or supplement information from other sources,” the report stated. “In other cases, a missing or erroneous code could disrupt vital care activities, such as automated surveillance for drug-allergy interactions.”

In another study published in June, the RAND corporation found that meaningful use requirements for interoperability were “watered down” and promoted adoption of current technology instead of promoting emerging products.

“By subsidizing ‘where the industry is’ rather than where it needed to go, HHS rule-makers allowed hospitals and health care providers to use billions in federal subsidies to purchase EHRs that did not have the level of connectivity envisioned by the authors of the HITECH act,” the report stated.

Somplasky and Byrnes both said they have seen the “watered down” scenario play out in their own experiences.

“There are areas where [EHR vendors] squeak by on the certification and there are other areas where they have done very well,” Byrnes said.

“There is a certification process, but within that process, you had some real dogs,” Somplasky said. “We would just sit there and wonder ‘How did [this EHR vendor] ever make it through the test?”

White said one area where “there is a lot more room to work” is figuring out a post-implementation testing phase so health care providers can learn all the in and outs of the EHR system they just purchased.

“The value of an EHR is it should be able to say ‘Wait a minute, did you really mean to do that?’,” White said. “What you find is systems have a capability, but when they are implemented in a given hospital, there’s traces about what alerts you turn on and who gets that alert. What you find is as implemented, those tools may catch the things you expect them to [and] they may not.”

Yet even with flaws, White said doctors should be able to recognize basic errors that come from EHR systems.

“There’s a higher level of accountability,” he said. “A doctor should know not to subscribe 10 times the right amount of morphine for his patient.”

Even with a system that is working properly, Schierer said EHRs often take away from the amount of time doctors are engaging with patients.

“The reason doctors are not happy with meaningful use is, if you back up the clock 5-10 years ago when most physicians weren’t using [EHRs], we were all still being paid on volume,” he said. “Now, if I throw in [EHRs], we’re trying to move to a value- and quality-based system, but yet remunerated primarily on the number of patients I see per day. So now what you’ve done is you’ve made [doctors] use electronic medical records, you’re making [doctors] add medications and allergies in a structured fashion. Before, I would just check off ‘chest pain’ on a paper bill and anything I couldn’t find, I would handwrite it and my [staff] would find the code. Now the physicians have to do that, and they don’t have more time to take care of the patients, either.”

A slow prognosis

So as more hospital systems and health care providers add EHRs, what can be done to solve interoperability issues?

AHRQ tasked an independent group of scientists known as JASON to come up with a number of recommendations, which they put forth in a 65-page report in April. One of the key takeaways was a call to implement a set of open standards and APIs for EHR vendors to follow by 2017 when the final stage of HHS’ meaningful use standards kick in.

“To achieve interoperability for EHRs and to open the entrepreneurial space for software development, all of these elements must be made public,” the JASON report states. “People frequently encounter standards in their daily lives. For example, an E26 light bulb has a standard base diameter and conductor position to allow mating with a compatible socket, which also has standard properties. One uses different names for this same basic concept at different levels.”

Schierer has other ideas, including a health ID number that would act as an identifier in order to differentiate people as they move through different EHR systems. This number would differ from a social security number in that it wouldn’t be re-assigned to someone new once a person dies.

“You can’t take a chance by using an identifier that is used for a patient, and then its re-used, and then you get some dead person’s health information,” he said. “What we really need is a national health identifier number, so that your number would have 12-15 digits in it, that was unique to you forever.”

Currently, if patients move from one system to another, a complex algorithm can identify a patient, but it relies on systems being interoperable.

According to White, even as problems continue, the process of improvement will continue to be incremental.

“This is a really complex health system and there’s a lot of different needs,” White said. “I feel some of those needs are being met. I think a lot of those needs are not being met and I think they need to be worked on.”

Schierer said that while doctors and health care providers are frustrated, EHRs have given doctors access to more information than they ever previously had.

“Our memory is very, very short,” he said. “We have all forgotten those experiences of having to take care of patients without this information and having to call people on the phone and wait for stuff to come to you, now it’s all there in front of us. It’s very very powerful.”

Whatever the answer, Byrnes knows she will have to comply if she wants to stay in business.

“There’s no turning back from this,” she said. “The direction that we are trying to move in is going to take a lot of development. I don’t think the exchange of information is going to get us there.”

– See more at: http://fedscoop.com/ehr-interoperability-stage-2-meaningful-use/view-all/#sthash.nlk5EYZz.dpuf

 

McDonald: VA needs unprecedented cultural change – Fierce Government

Posted by timmreardon on 08/19/2014
Posted in: Blue Button, Health Care Costs, Health Care Economics, Health IT adoption, Health Outcomes, Healthcare Delivery, Healthcare Informatics, Innovation, Integrated Electronic Health Records, Military Health System Reform, National Health IT System, Patient Centered Medical Home, Patient Portals, Quadruple Aim, Uncategorized. Leave a comment

Fixing the Veterans Affairs Department will take an unprecedented culture change in the agency, but it will give the VA an opportunity to overhaul the failing system, newly-confirmed VA Secretary Robert McDonald said at an Aug. 13 speech at the AMVETS National Conference in Memphis, Tennessee.

McDonald laid out the major problems facing the VA, including veterans waiting too long for care, performance metrics becoming an end in themselves, poor leadership, no accountability for poor performing managers and an antiquated scheduling system.

But even knowing the problems, it won’t be easy to fix them, McDonald told the AMVETS crowd.

“Now, we can’t tackle all these issues long-term without unprecedented and critical cultural change and accountability,” he said. “And I think there are already seeds of that happening, perhaps in some unprecedented ways.”

McDonald said Congress is actually ready to act on VA reform, which can be seen by the fact that it only took 30 days from confirmation to swearing in for him to take his position as the new VA secretary. The floor vote on the Senate was 97-0.

“That’s not a commentary on me,” McDonald said. “It’s a clear sign of a nation’s extraordinary commitment to Veterans.”

McDonald has been touring the country talking to workers at VA hospitals and says the problem isn’t relegated to one facility, it’s systemic.

“When I visited the Medical Center in Phoenix, I kept hearing an unfortunate nickname–‘epicenter,'” McDonald said. “But the problems we discovered in Phoenix were systemic, extending well-beyond that one location and that one moment in time.”

For more:
– read VA Secretary McDonald’s speech

Article link: http://www.fiercegovernment.com/story/mcdonald-va-needs-unprecedented-cultural-change/2014-08-18?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal

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Senate sends VA reform bill to Obama’s desk
House approves VA reform bill giving secretary power to fire executives
Bipartisan VA bill would make it easier to fire VA senior execs

Pay rises for hospital execs, led by UMass Memorial chief – Business – The Boston Globe

Posted by timmreardon on 08/18/2014
Posted in: Health Care Costs, Health Care Economics, Health Outcomes, Healthcare Delivery, Uncategorized. Leave a comment

The departing chief of UMass Memorial Health Care in Worcester earned $4.8 million in 2012, topping the list of Massachusetts hospital executives who received healthy increases in seven-figure pay packages — even as they faced growing pressure to bring costs under control.

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John G. O’Brien, who retired in February 2013 after more than a decade at UMass Memorial, nearly doubled his compensation from 2011, when he earned $2.4 million as head of the biggest health care system in Central Massachusetts. Much of his 2012 compensation included retirement benefits earned during his tenure.

O’Brien’s payout came several months before UMass Memorial reported a staggering $55 million operating loss for the fiscal year ending September 2013. The system has since laid off hundreds of workers and made other changes to close the gap under the new chief, Dr. Eric W. Dickson.

Douglas Brown, UMass Memorial’s chief legal counsel, said O’Brien helped expand the health system and did “a remarkable job” as chief executive.

“It is true we suffered a lot in 2013,” Brown said. “We certainly don’t blame that on John O’Brien. We look at his [entire] tenure.”

Brown added that the health system, which employs 12,000 and collects $2.5 billion in revenues, needs to pay well to attract top talent. “We want to pay competitively with the markets so that we can get the best,” he said.

Massachusetts nonprofits are required to report executive compensation and other figures to the attorney general’s office and the Internal Revenue Service each year, although there is a lag of more than a year in the reporting. Nine nonprofit hospital systems provided those documents to the Globe on Friday.

Most of the 11 top executives at these nonprofit systems received raises. The increases are consistent with a national trend of growing compensation for executives, even as state and federal laws push them to get rising costs under control. Massachusetts, known for its top-quality hospitals, has the highest health costs in the nation.

The biggest health system in Massachusetts, Boston-based Partners HealthCare, gave its top executives big raises in 2012. Chief executive Dr. Gary L. Gottlieb’s compensation climbed 24 percent, to $2.6 million in total compensation, from $2.1 million the year before.

Dr. Elizabeth G. Nabel, president of the Partners-owned Brigham and Women’s Hospital, made about $2.4 million, a 26 percent raise from her 2011 pay of $1.9 million. At Massachusetts General Hospital, Partners’s other flagship location, president Dr. Peter L. Slavin earned $2.2 million, up nearly 30 percent from $1.7 million.

The highest-paid Partners executive was Peter K. Markell, the chief financial officer, who earned $3.9 million, including $2.6 million in deferred compensation and other benefits. Two other Partners executives earned at least $2.7 million each.

Annual compensation includes base pay, bonuses, retirement benefits, and other payments, and it is rising for hospital executives nationwide. But Thomas Flannery, partner at the consulting firm Mercer, said scrutiny of compensation is also increasing as consumers and employers focus more on the cost and quality of care.

“Over the next decade, the issue is going to be not just the level of compensation but the performance that these highly paid executives deliver,” Flannery said. “Those organizations that are able to demonstrate low cost, high quality are the organizations that are going to win in the long term.”

Chief executives of nearly all the state’s biggest nonprofit hospitals made more than $1 million in 2012. Former Tufts Medical Center chief executive Eric Beyer, who left the hospital last year, earned about $911,000. Dr. Kevin Tabb of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center earned $1.4 million in his first full year as chief executive.

Boston Medical Center paid chief executive Kate Walsh $1.3 million in 2012, slightly less than the year before.

Compensation for the Children’s Hospital’s chief, Dr. James Mandell, now retired, stayed at about $1.5 million. Dr. Edward J. Benz Jr. of Dana-Farber Cancer Institute was paid $1.3 million, also about the same as a year earlier.

Outside Boston, Dr. Howard R. Grant of Burlington-based Lahey Health earned $1.7 million, a 70 percent bump from about $1 million the year before. And in Springfield, compensation stayed steady at about $1.6 million for the former chief of Baystate Health, Mark R. Tolosky.

Dr. Karen Joynt, assistant professor at Harvard Medical School, said executive compensation needs to be tied more closely to the care patients receive, rather than just the revenues hospitals generate. Joynt conducted a recent study that found little connection between chief executive compensation and a hospital’s quality of care.

“We want incentives to be in place so that people are focused on making care better and more efficient, and not just making more money for the hospital,” she said.

Article link: http://www.bostonglobe.com/business/2014/08/15/pay-rises-for-hospital-execs-led-umass-memorial-chief/Gs3rzPql1GF5PpZp35OyHO/story.html?rss_id=Top-GNP&google_editors_picks=true

ONC’s interoperability vision draws concern from federal advisers (or why an Integrated vs. Interoperable EHR is needed) – Fierce Health IT

Posted by timmreardon on 08/06/2014
Posted in: Global Standards, Health Care Costs, Health Care Economics, Health IT adoption, Health Outcomes, Healthcare Delivery, Healthcare Informatics, Healthcare Security, HIPAA, ICD-10, Innovation, Integrated Electronic Health Records, Military Health System Reform, Mobile Healthcare, Patient Centered Medical Home, Patient Portals, PCMH, Quadruple Aim, Uncategorized. Leave a comment

Published on FierceHealthIT (http://www.fiercehealthit.com)

ONC’s interoperability vision draws concern from federal advisers

August 6, 2014 | By Dan Bowman

While an official with the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT provided an overview of a forthcoming interoperability roadmap at a virtual meeting of the agency’s health IT policy committee on Wednesday, committee members raised concerns that perhaps the aim of the agency’s effort is too broad.

Erica Galvez, the interoperability and exchange portfolio manager at ONC, said a draft of the roadmap–which will be a companion document to the agency’s vision paper published in June–is due to be published in October. A more robust version that includes feedback from ONC’s health IT policy and standards committees would then be available for public comment by January.

Version 1.0 of the roadmap, which Galvez stressed would be a “living document,” is anticipated to be ready by March 2015.

“This will be something that we will revisit on a regular basis,” Galvez said. “We recognize there will be things that will be unanticipated and unexpected.”

Galvez said that ONC has adopted the Institute of Electrical and Electronics Engineers’ definition of interoperability–the ability of two or more systems or components to exchange information and to use that exchanged information–and that the agency wants it to apply to individuals, their families and their healthcare providers in terms of having appropriate access to health information.

To that end, however, committee member Paul Egerman, former CEO of eScription, said it might not be realistic.

“What you’re trying to do here with interoperability is a very, very hard issue, especially if you define it broadly,” Egerman said. “Is this what we really want to do?”

Egerman added that “layering” individuals accessing their data onto interoperability increases the difficulty of the task at hand

“If we just get the systems themselves to talk to each other, that would be a huge accomplishment,” Egerman said. “Perhaps we’re making this harder than we need to make it, and it’s already pretty hard.”

Committee member Marc Probst, CIO at Salt Lake City-based Intermountain Healthcare, said the agency is trying to do too much.

“It seems to me that things like empowering individuals or maintaining modularity or focusing on value–those are how we would use interoperability, if we had it,” Probst said. “If we could focus first on getting interoperability, I don’t know that we have to burden this roadmap with empowering individuals.”

Galvez added that ONC has launched a new online community to solicit public input on the roadmap. Comments, according to a Health IT Buzz blog post touting the community, are due by Sept. 12.

To learn more:
– download Galvez’s presentation from the meeting
– check out the online community
– read the Health IT Buzz post

Related Articles:
ONC unveils 10-year plan for healthcare interoperability
Interoperability plan draws tempered industry reaction
Trimmer ONC will have its work cut out for it
DeSalvo: Big data, privacy will help ONC pivot focus

Source URL: http://www.fiercehealthit.com/story/oncs-interoperability-vision-draws-concern-federal-advisers/2014-08-06

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