Quote Of The Year

Timeless Quotes - Sadly The Late Paul Shetler - "Its not Your Health Record it's a Government Record Of Your Health Information"

or

H. L. Mencken - "For every complex problem there is an answer that is clear, simple, and wrong."

Friday, February 04, 2011

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 04 February, 2011.

Here are a few I have come across this week.

Note: Each link is followed by a title and a paragraph or two. For the full article click on the link above title of the article. Note also that full access to some links may require site registration or subscription payment.

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http://govhealthit.com/newsitem.aspx?nid=76064

Health data exchange still a challenge, Blumenthal says

By Mary Mosquera

Friday, January 21, 2011

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT is heavily involved in ongoing work with vendors and standards organizations to enable the exchange of health information, something that remains a challenge, according to Dr. David Blumenthal, the national health IT coordinator.

“We don’t believe that standards development stopped in July 2010,” when the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and ONC published their final rules for meaningful use, he said. “We are actively developing new implementation specifications in collaboration with health IT vendors, standards development organizations and industry in a wiki-style process, such as has been done with the Direct Project.”

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http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/TEC-261894/EvidenceBased-Care-Gaps-Pervasive-Researchers-Say

Evidence-Based Care Gaps Pervasive, Researchers Say

HealthLeaders Media Staff , January 28, 2011

Healthcare systems around the world are failing to use evidence obtained through research, according to Sharon E. Straus, MD, MSc, FRCPC, a geriatrician and director of knowledge translation at St. Michael's Hospital in Toronto. The result: reduced length and quality of life, she and her colleagues write in a recent paper.

Straus was the guest editor of the January issue of the Journal of Clinical Epidemiology, which featured articles on knowledge translation. Knowledge translation is the term for closing the gap between evidence and data obtained through research and healthcare practice and policy.

More simply, it addresses the gap between what we know and what we do.

Failure to use research-based evidence to inform healthcare decision making are is prevalent among patients, caregivers, managers, and policymakers across all disciplines and in developed and developing countries, she and her colleagues note in one of the articles.

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http://www.govhealthit.com/newsitem.aspx?nid=75973

ONC will simplify guides for establishing exchange standards

By Mary Mosquera

Tuesday, January 18, 2011

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT plans to develop a clearer set of technical descriptions for establishing the standard clinical document formats for exchanging summary information as patients move across settings of care.

ONC will also consolidate into a consistent template-based guide the advice offered by multiple organizations for implementing the standard document formats used to share data about patients’ medications and problems.

These are among the first projects that ONC has launched for its Standards & Interoperability Framework, which will tackle persistent challenges that healthcare providers face in successfully exchanging information in order to meet meaningful use requirements of electronic health records (EHRs), according to Dr. Doug Fridsma, director of ONC’s Office of Standards and Interoperability.

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http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20110125/NEWS/301259986/

Stanford researchers find EHRs don't boost care quality

By Joseph Conn

Posted: January 25, 2011 - 11:15 am ET

A pair of researchers at Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif., has released results of a three-year study that indicates EHRs did little to improve the quality of care.

"There's a lot of enthusiasm and money being invested in electronic health records," senior author Dr. Randall Stafford said in a news release. "It makes sense, but on the other hand it's an unproven proposition. When the federal government decides to invest in healthcare technology because it will improve the quality of care, that's not based on evidence. That's a presumption."

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http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/print/TEC-261743/5-Ways-to-Engage-Patients-in-PHRs

5 Ways to Engage Patients in PHRs

Gienna Shaw, for HealthLeaders Media , January 25, 2011

One of the "five pillars" of meaningful use is to engage patients and their families in electronic health data. But engaging patients and families with electronic health data isn't just about HITECH requirements and stimulus money - - it's also a way to foster collaborative decision-making between provider and patient, which, in turn, improves the patient experience, leads to better outcomes, and can reduce readmissions.

Americans pay more attention and become more engaged in their health and medical care when they have easy access to their health information online, according to a 2010 California HealthCare Foundation survey. For example, patients who use a personal health record say they take steps to improve their own health, know more about their healthcare, and ask their doctors questions they say they would not otherwise have asked.

But consumer adoption is still low—just 7%, according to the survey. The questions facing the healthcare industry are how best to get those numbers up and whose job it is to do so.

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http://www.miller-mccune.com/health/your-next-m-d-might-be-a-pda-26777/

Your Next M.D. Might Be a PDA

Handheld sensors using specialized — and relatively cheap — biosensors may deliver an instant diagnosis of diseases, contaminated water and biological attacks.

Your doctor has a hunch that your respiratory infection and fever are caused by bacteria (and should be treated with antibiotics), but it might instead be a simple virus, which should be allowed to run its course.

Today, lab tests could take several days to complete, but in a couple of years a handheld device called an acoustic wave biosensor might sample a droplet of your saliva to reveal within seconds whether your doctor’s hunch was correct.

Just three of these biosensors, developed by the University of New Mexico Health Sciences Center and Sandia National Laboratories, exist at the moment. But the invention has been licensed for development, garnering enough buzz to have made R&D Magazine’s Top 100 list for 2010.

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http://europa.eu/rapid/pressReleasesAction.do?reference=SPEECH/11/43&format=HTML&aged=

eHealth: an answer to EU healthcare and demographic challenges

ETNO Innovation Day 2011

Brussels, 25 January 2011

Ladies and Gentlemen,

I am delighted to be here this afternoon. Telecoms operators have not had a long history in eHealth, but I want to do everything in my power to work with you to change that. You have a critical role in our society enabling so many different types of relationships and transactions. And you run the essential infrastructure – broadband, other communications networks – which can revolutionise how health is managed.

As you are well aware, demography is not on our side. More than 30% of Europeans will be 65 or over in 2025. Chronic conditions are going up just as a shortage of specialists and carers emerges. This will become a huge care gap unless technology fills it. It means our systems are guaranteed to collapse if we do not make radical changes. When I hear information like the Spanish Government's estimates that health professionals are spending between 30 and 50 per cent of their time on administrative tasks, it is even clearer that innovation cannot come soon enough!

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http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/TEC-261901/GOP-bill-puts-meaningful-use-HITECH-Act-in-peril

GOP Bill Puts Meaningful Use, HITECH Act in Peril

HDM Breaking News, January 27, 2011

Legislation introduced in the U.S. House and initially sponsored by nearly three-quarters of the Republican caucus clearly appears to seek repeal of the Medicare/Medicaid electronic health record meaningful use incentive payment programs. But whether the bill also would repeal all of the HITECH Act within the economic stimulus law is unclear.

The bill also would prohibit appropriations of funds to carry out any programs under the health care reform law, and a related law designated to "fix" components of the reform law.

The bill is H.R. 408, the Spending Reduction Act of 2011, and sponsored by Rep. Jim Jordan (R-Ohio) along with, at this juncture, 174 other GOP members. The House has 242 Republicans, far above the 218 votes needed for passage in the chamber. The bill seeks to cut $2.5 trillion in federal spending during the next decade. It includes an extensive list of existing government programs that would be repealed, along with other provisions to cut spending, including extending the federal employee pay freeze and limiting the number of civilian employees in the Executive Branch.

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http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20110128/NEWS/301289950

Use health IT to tailor treatments: Brookings

By Rich Daly

Posted: January 28, 2011 - 11:30 am ET

Outdated healthcare policies are keeping physicians and hospitals from providing personalized treatments tailored to individuals' genetic structures, according to a new paper (PDF) by the director of governance studies at the Washington-based Brookings Institution.

The healthcare reform law could use health IT to help overcome these barriers, Brookings scholar Darrell West writes.

Specifically, West urges the CMS to use some of the $10 billion in the Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act for "innovation" pilot projects to test the ability of health IT to allow personalized medicine. Additionally, the National Institutes of Health could use its substantial research budget to fund new projects aimed at reducing policy barriers to broad adoption of personalized medicine, according to West.

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http://www.post-trib.com/news/3041464,methodist-ptb-0127.article

Hospital wants its $16M back from failed computer system

January 27, 2011

BY TERESA AUCH SCHULTZ, (219) 648-3120

The Methodist Hospitals claims in a federal lawsuit that the company it hired in 2006 to help steer it out of a financial mess instead directed it to a new computer system that wasted $16.6 million.

The computer system opened up almost half of Methodist's computers to a virus attack and messed up patient information to the point that doctors and nurses had to abandon the system altogether, according to the lawsuit filed Wednesday in the U.S. District Court in Hammond.

The lawsuit names as defendants FTI Cambio, a Tennessee company, and HealthNET and Medical Information Technology Inc., both based in Massachusetts.

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Healthcare Software Development Exposes Security Risks

Many organizations are lax in protecting patient data during development and testing, finds Ponemon Institute study.

By Nicole Lewis, InformationWeek

Jan. 26, 2011

URL: http://www.informationweek.com/story/showArticle.jhtml?articleID=229100300

According to a survey of IT managers at health delivery organizations, 51% of respondents said they don't protect patient data used in software development and testing.

Released on Tuesday, the findings come at a time when the healthcare industry is transferring medical records from paper-based systems to digitized medical records, which calls for more development and testing of software in healthcare environments.

The report, "Health Data at Risk in Development: A Call for Data Masking," also revealed that lost patient information can go undetected. A full 78% of respondents said they are not confident or else are undecided as to whether their organization could even detect the theft or accidental loss of real data in development or testing.

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http://healthcareitnews.com/news/obama-gives-hit-nod-state-union-speech

Obama gives HIT the nod in State of the Union speech

January 26, 2011 | Diana Manos, Senior Editor

WASHINGTON – In a broad State of the Union speech Tuesday night, President Obama hailed the information age in America and the need for the federal government to support IT innovation.

"In America, innovation doesn’t just change our lives, it’s how we make a living," he said. "Our free enterprise system is what drives innovation. But because it’s not always profitable for companies to invest in basic research, throughout history our government has provided cutting-edge scientists and inventors with the support that they need. That’s what planted the seeds for the Internet. That’s what helped make possible things like computer chips and GPS."

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http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2011/01/24/bise0125.htm

Men, chronically ill embrace virtual medical visits

A survey finds 78% of all respondents open to the idea of remote monitoring of their health care.

Men and chronically ill patients are the most likely to support remote monitoring and virtual visits as part of their health care. But a large majority of the public is at least willing to give it a try, according to a new survey.

Euro RSCG Tonic, the New York-based consumer health and wellness arm of the marketing and communications firm Euro RSCG, conducted an Internet survey of 1,000 adults in mid-November 2010, and found that nearly half are receptive to virtual visits to save time and money, and 78% would be willing to give it a shot. Twenty-three percent said they would never consider a remote visit with a doctor.

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http://govhealthit.com/newsitem.aspx?nid=76122

ONC adds $80M to extension centers, HIEs and workforce programs

By Mary Mosquera

Thursday, January 27, 2011

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT has awarded a total of $80 million more for its regional extension center, state health information exchange and community college workforce programs to boost their support of providers becoming meaningful users of electronic health records.

More funds will strengthen the momentum of these programs, which ONC launched last year, as physicians and hospitals begin to register for the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Records (EHR) Incentive Programs.

For extension centers (RECs), which offer local technical assistance to individual physicians and small practices, ONC has provided $32 million in additional funds. The money will accelerate outreach to providers to encourage their registration in the EHR incentive program and to direct more staff in the field as providers adopt health IT in their practices, said Dr. David Blumenthal, the national health IT coordinator, in a Jan. 27 letter announcing the program awards.

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http://www.healthdatamanagement.com/news/himss-pcast-universal-exchange-language-41793-1.html

HIMSS: Obama Advisors On Wrong Track

HDM Breaking News, January 26, 2011

Inaccurate patient identification methods could sink the vision of the President's Council of Advisors on Science and Technology for establishment of a "universal exchange language" to accelerate health information exchange, according to the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society.

In a comment letter, Chicago-based HIMSS expresses concern that the council's report issued in December "continually states that there is no role for universal patient identifiers, but does not offer a detailed approach as to how the healthcare community will achieve error-free patient identification across healthcare organizations."

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http://www.fierceemr.com/story/cios-need-consider-new-course-promote-emr-adoption/2011-01-27

CIOs need to consider new course to promote EMR adoption

January 27, 2011 — 2:22pm ET | By Janice Simmons - Contributing Editor

CIOs will need to think and act far differently than in past years to successfully drive the use of and implement EMRs, according to an Accenture survey of CIOs who already have achieved advanced use of EMRs within their hospitals and health systems.

Less than 1 percent of health systems have achieved "mature use" of EMRs in 2009, Accenture estimated. However, at the same time, nearly half of all U.S. hospitals could have trouble meeting federal EMR meaningful use requirements by 2015, according to Accenture's new report, "Secrets of Success on the EMR Journey to Meaningful Use: Leading Hospital CIOs Reveal Key Lessons Learned."

"From strategic planning, staffing and adoption, health systems are integrating technology at a previously unprecedented level, but many health systems are lagging and at risk of facing penalties," said Mark Knickrehm, global managing director, Accenture Health Practice, in a statement.

One of the survey's key findings is that most major health systems are underestimating the time and cost associated with implementing advanced EMR functions.

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http://seattletimes.nwsource.com/html/localnews/2014036271_swedish26m.html

Software glitch shuts down Swedish medical-records system

A four-hour shutdown of Swedish Medical Center's centralized electronic medical-records system Monday morning was caused by a glitch in another company's software.

Seattle Times health reporter

A four-hour shutdown of Swedish Medical Center's centralized electronic medical-records system Monday morning was caused by a glitch in another company's software, said Swedish chief information officer Janice Newell.

The system, made by Epic Systems, a Wisconsin-based electronic medical-records vendor, turned itself off because it noticed an error in the add-on software, Newell said, and Swedish was forced to go to its highest level of backup operation. That allowed medical providers to see patient records but not to add or change information, such as medication orders.

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http://healthcareitnews.com/news/ehrs-cpoe-featured-top-10-healthcare-predictions-2011

EHRs, CPOE featured in top 10 healthcare predictions for 2011

January 25, 2011 | Bernie Monegain, Editor

FRAMINGHAM, MA – New reiumbursement models driven by healthcare reform tops the list of the top 10 healthcare provider predictions from IDC Health Insight analysts Judy Hanover and Lynn Dunbrack.

IDC Health Insights' top 10 healthcare provider predictions identify major trends that will impact the U.S. provider IT landscape in 2011.

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http://www.who.int/goe/ehir/2011/january_25_2011/en/index.html

E-Health Intelligence Report

January 25, 2011

Publications

  • Standards and eHealth
  • ITU - January 2011
  • Electronic health (eHealth) systems continue to hold great promise for improving global access to healthcare services and health informatics, particularly in the developing world
  • Mobile e-Health Solutions for Developing Countries
  • ITU - 2010
  • The report highlights the role of mobile telecommunication technology in health care by offering at a distance the medical consultation and administration of patient treatment.
  • Creative Economy Report 2010: A Feasible Development Option
  • UNCTAD - December 2010
  • Chapter 7: Technology, connectivity and the creative economy. Improved broadband connectivity can help to achieve education and health targets set out in the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs).

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http://www.mitwa.org/sites/default/files/files/MITEF%20NW%20Boomers%20Technology%20and%20Health%20Report.pdf

Baby boomers’ demand for wireless and mHealth products to hit $12 billion by 2020

Aging, tech-savvy baby boomers who want to retain control over their own lives will lead to a near-tripling of their adoption of wireless and mobile health (mHealth) products by 2020, according to a study by the Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT) Enterprise Forum of the Northwest.

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http://www.healthdatamanagement.com/news/certification-meaningful-use-ehr-cchit-41780-1.html

Beth Israel's In-House EHR Certified

HDM Breaking News, January 24, 2011

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston is the first hospital to have its in-house developed electronic health records system certified as meeting meaningful use under a new program from the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology.

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http://www.ehealthinitiative.org/ehealth-initiative-reports-projects.html

eHealth Initiative Reports & Projects

eHealth Initiative and Thomson Reuters Report: Governance Models for HIE NEW

Top Eleven Trends for 2011: Report from eHealth Initiative and GE Healthcare

Planning for Adoption: The Early Direction of Regional Extension Centers

The State of Health Information Exchange in 2010: Connecting the Nation to Achieve Meaningful Use (2010)

National Progress Report on eHealth (2010)

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http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/print/TEC-261672/OCR-Patient-Data-Breach-List-Hits-Milestone

OCR Patient Data Breach List Hits Milestone

Dom Nicastro, for HealthLeaders Media , January 24, 2011

The number of entities reporting breaches of unsecured protected health information (PHI) affecting 500 or more individuals has hit 225. The web site was born out of HITECH and has been live since February 2010.

OCR says the breach reports date back to September 2009. Hence, it's been about 17 months since OCR has accepted the reports. It amounts to about 13 reports filed per month, or 0.44 per day.

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http://healthitupdate.nextgov.com/2011/01/adopting_advanced_electronic_medical_records.php?oref=latest_posts

Health IT Takes Time and Money

By John Pulley

Adopting advanced electronic medical records takes longer and costs more than most hospitals imagine, warn hospital IT executives who have already trod that path.

IT operating expenses spike by 80 percent during the transition to an EMR system, chief information officers of 15 major U.S. hospital systems told researchers from Accenture, a management consulting, technology services and outsourcing company. Looking ahead, finding IT personnel who are qualified to handle the installation and implementation of the sophisticated technology will be tough, the CIOs predict -- and hospitals will have to ante up plenty of cash to attract top IT talent.

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http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20110124/blogs02/301249999

Not-so-rosy numbers

Last week, Dr. David Blumenthal announced the results of two surveys funded by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology on hospital and physician participation in the federal electronic health-record incentive programs.

But Dr. B left out a few numbers in going over the results of the survey of office-based physicians conducted by the National Center for Health Statistics. On request, the ONC and NCHS released those missing numbers.

Docs were asked: "Are there plans to apply for Medicare or Medicaid incentive payments for meaningful use of health IT?" Blumenthal reported on their answers in part, noting that 41.1% indicated "yes" and 14% said "no." However, a 44.9% plurality, which he did not mention, chose "uncertain whether we will apply."

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http://www.fiercehealthit.com/story/providers-struggle-fill-clinical-it-positions/2011-01-24

Providers struggle to fill clinical IT positions

January 24, 2011 — 3:30pm ET | By Dan Bowman

St. Luke's Health System in Sioux City, Iowa may recently have been able to fill its need for a clinical informatics specialist, but that doesn't mean other hospitals in similar positions nationwide will have the same luck, according to a new Hay Group study.

The global consulting firm found that 47 percent of healthcare organizations have struggled when trying to fill, or retain talent for, newly created clinical informatics positions. Ultimately, it comes down to supply and demand, with such talent now in high demand but low supply thanks to the recent emphasis on health IT, highlighted by the Healthcare Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act, which is part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

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http://www.fiercehealthit.com/story/health-it-still-has-many-detractors-healthcare/2011-01-24

Health IT still has many detractors in healthcare

January 24, 2011 — 1:02pm ET | By Ken Terry - Contributing Editor

Despite the government-led explosion of activity in the health IT field, physician and hospital leaders remain deeply divided about the value of information technology in patient care.

The latest reminder of this came in a Thomson Reuters survey of nearly 3,000 physicians. Asked whether electronic health records would help patients, 39 percent of the doctors said they would; 37 percent said there would be no effect; and 24 percent said EHRs would have a negative impact on care.

In a broader survey of physicians and healthcare executives, 80 percent of the respondents said they thought the widespread adoption of health IT would improve the quality of care and organizational efficiency. But Jim Cramer, CIO of Scottsdale (Ariz.) Healthcare and an advisor on the report, said that many of his peers have doubts about the use of health IT in complex medical situations.

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http://www.ihealthbeat.org/features/2011/conference-offers-look-at-health-it-landscape.aspx

Monday, January 24, 2011

Conference Offers Look at Health IT Landscape

"Welcome to the era of meaningful use." That's how National Coordinator for Health IT David Blumenthal greeted attendees at the eHealth Initiative annual conference last week.

He noted that as of Jan. 3, it became possible for health care providers to register for meaningful use incentive payments and that Kentucky and Oklahoma already have doled out Medicaid incentive payments under the program.

Blumenthal highlighted all of the progress that's been made in the health IT sphere, from the establishment of 62 regional extension centers to the launch of 84 community college health IT training programs to an electronic health record certification process. However, he noted that there's still much work to be done.

Blumenthal said, "The age of meaningful use is not the end of our vision or the end of our journey, it is the beginning. We still have an enormous amount of work to do and an enormous amount of education to do."

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Enjoy!

David.

Flash: Dr. David Blumenthal Steps Down As National Coordinator For Health Information Technology.

Dr. David Blumenthal just announced his resignation from the position of National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. In this position, Blumenthal led the implementation of a nationwide interoperable, privacy-protected health information technology infrastructure as part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. Along with this, he led the effort to influence doctors and hospitals to adopt electronic medical record systems.

Dr. Blumenthal will leave this Spring and return to Harvard University.

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I guess this might just show how hard all this can be!

David.

Thursday, February 03, 2011

NEHTA Receives Yet More Money and a Blog Correspondent Responds! Astonishingly Fun Stuff if it Were Not So Sad!

We had the following appear yesterday.

NEHTA scores $38.5m for e-health record rollout

  • Karen Dearne
  • From: Australian IT
  • February 02, 2011 5:49PM

THE federal Health department has released $38.5 million to the National E-Health Transition Authority for the next stage of the $467m personally-controlled e-health record rollout.

Under the six-month contract to June 30, NEHTA will provide management support services as private-sector partners are hired for four key roles: a national infrastructure partner; a change and adoption partner; a benefits realisation partner and an external assurance adviser.

Bidders are currently being sought for the benefits realisation partner, whose brief is to monitor and measure progress through an analytical and evaluation framework. The tender deadline has been extended a week to February 18, after potential candidates called for more information on the PCEHR program. Bidders seek details.

NEHTA chief executive Peter Fleming said the $38.5m was the first funding to be released for the PCEHR work.

“As you would expect, there will be a number of very significant builds underway this year,” he said.

“On the infrastructure side, there’ll be an indexing service, repository services and template services, so we’re looking for an infrastructure partner, or partners, for that.

More here:

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/australian-it/government/nehta-scores-385m-for-e-health-record-rollout/story-fn4htb9o-1225998925462

The news is also covered here:

NEHTA receives next instalment of $466.7m e-health project

The funding of $38.7 million will assist the organisation in the next stage of its personally-controlled electronic health record (PCEHR) project

The National e-health Transition Authority (NEHTA) has confirmed it has received the latest tranche of a total of $466.7 million in funding from the Federal Department of Health for the next stage of its personally-controlled electronic health record (PCEHR) project.

According to a NEHTA spokesperson, the funding will be provided for a six month period to 30 June this year under which the organisation will provide management support services as private-sector partners are hired for four key roles: a national infrastructure partner; a change and adoption partner; a benefits realisation partner and an external assurance adviser.

The PCEHR project is scheduled to deliver an e-health record for all Australians by June 2012 and will enable medical records to be transferred between medical providers such as hospitals and general practitioner doctors electronically, rather than through paper records.

The NEHTA spokesperson did not comment on future funding plans for upcoming stage of the project, stating the Federal Government would make its own announcement on future funding.

More here:

http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/375382/nehta_receives_next_installment_466_7m_e-health_project/?fp=4&fpid=5

The first of these two provoked this astonishing response from a reader:

Anonymous said...

I read your post and 5 minutes later read an article in the Australian about NEHTA getting an additional $38.5 million to spend over a mere 6 month contract to project manage the next bureacratic stage of the fanciful PCEHR white elephant.

I work in the hospital system (and used to work for an Australian health IT vendor that folded about 5 years ago), but also have to visit outpatient services every month for Warfarin management. So I've been affected by the lack of e-health from a few different perspectives and I'm a real believer that simple use of appropriate information technologies can make a big difference in improving safety or helping patients have a better quality experience.

I read your post and then the big-noting, egotistical arrogance of NEHTA's CEO Peter Fleming and I could bearly contain the expletives.

I am disgusted, appalled, incensed, infuriated and incredulous at this waste. Patients in Australian hospitals and communities are suffering awful quality of care, unsafe hospitals because of poor morale, bad communication and poor morale of overloaded nurses and doctors, we have shockingly poor mental health treatment options and an indigenous population that dies 10 years before they should. We have a cyclone devastating North Queensland, floods displacing thousands in Queensland and Victoria and bushfires in NSW and Perth.

And some idiot believes that a good investment of tax-payer money is to spend $38.5 million for a bunch of bungling bureaucrats to decide how to spend the next $400million on eHealth projects that promise the world and deliver nothing. Then we have the audacity of the chief bungling bufoon, Peter Fleming to say "With the work on the other components, the benefits realisation, change management and so on, we’re going to see a lot of activity focused on communities this year.”

Not my bloody community!!!!

So with a rising blood pressure, I scanned the last five years of NEHTA's annual reports and only got more irate. Here's what NEHTA spent apparently and is likely to spend in 2010/11 (assuming this extra $38.5 million builds on last years base):

2006: $8.5 million
2007: $17.3 million
2008: $31.2 million
2009: $66.7 million
2010: $89.5 million
2011: $133.6 million

Total: $347 million

They've almost doubled their spending every single year. At this rate, they're doing better than Google or Facebook and could be a $4 billion business in just another 5 years!!

But I want to know the answer to this question: Having spent more than five years and a treasure chest of almost $350 million dollars, show me one single patient who has had a better experience, one single area of safety improvement or one single doctor or nurse who has been able to provide better care. I don't believe there is one and I can see no evidence from NEHTA of having achieved anything expect line their own pockets, justify their own existence and decimate a forest with paper documents.

I dowloaded a presentation from Leonie Katakar -Nehta's Director of Clinical Leadership (whatever that means) and found the last slide in her presentation said it all:

- Nehta is funded to provide the national infrastructure required to meet the needs of a clinically computerised and electronically connected health sector

-Computerisation and uptake of nehta products are the responsibility of the health sector

Wow - what a clinical leader you are. All care, no responsibility

When will there be some inquiry into this disgraceful waste - when will some auditor or politician hold these people to account? I find it deeply, deeply offensive.

---- End Comment.

I don’t know but the bar for quality comments has really been raised somehow in the last few months. Whoever you are - thanks - could not have said it better myself!

Of course this funding goes till June 30, 2011 -after that there will be more I guess - and even if the Tenders for these planned partners are all ready to roll - it seems unlikely even the procurements will be done by the time the funds run out - unless some extremely shonky procurement process - in the name of Government urgency - is undertaken.

So these will be pretty expensive tenders and those winning won’t have long to deliver before the July 1, 2012 PCHER pseudo and rather fraudulent deadline.

If the track record of delivery is anything to go by NEHTA are also not all that efficient at evaluation. We still don’t seem to have an outcome for the NASH Tender - released mid-September last year!

Of course we still don’t know what the PCEHR actually is as well but that seems to be a minor detail!

This all has the feeling of happening in some sort of parallel universe where you can buy things without specifications and find partners without knowing what they are to do!

Utter madness!

David.

Wednesday, February 02, 2011

Now Hear Is Something Else NASH and the HI Service Could Help With! And It Is Actually Also Needed!

The following appeared a day or so ago.

Govt should subsidise prescribing resources

MEDICAL leaders want electronic prescribing resources for doctors to be subsidised and regularly updated as the federal government puts more emphasis on e-health initiatives.

Professor Jon Emery, professor of general practice and head of the school of primary, Aboriginal and rural health care at the University of Western Australia, said quality use of medicines was an important issue and the federal government should look at ways to make the Australian medicines handbook (AMH) freely, or at very least more cheaply, available to all GPs.

The AMH currently costs $160 for an annual online subscription.

Professor Nick Buckley, consultant clinical pharmacologist and chair of the AMH editorial advisory committee, said the cost of the AMH or the Therapeutic guidelines should be subsidised because the community and patients paid a very high price when poor prescribing decisions were made.

Professor Buckley estimated it would cost less than 10 cents per GP prescription to subsidise the AMH or the Therapeutic guidelines.

He said such a subsidy would be cost-effective in improving health and would be likely to generate net savings.

“The total budget for the two organisations providing these resources is less than the average PBS [Pharmaceutical Benefits Scheme] expenditure on just one of the 717 … subsidised medicines,” Professor Buckley said.

The two experts were commenting on a study reported in Family Practice, which looked at GPs’ use of electronic information sources and computerised clinical decision support systems (CDSSs) for prescribing.(1)

More here:

http://www.mjainsight.com.au/view?post=Govt+should+subsidise+prescribing+resources+&post_id=2674&cat=news-and-research

It seems to me that this is really a very un-ambitious proposal. In the National E-Health Strategy in 2008 it was proposed that a modest sum should be spent ensuring all clinical practitioners have access to a service similar to the Clinical Information Access Program (CIAP) offered by NSW Health to public health employees in NSW.

The limitation in providing extended services to other groups is that the information providers retain copyright on some of the material and want to know the number of users so the correct fees can be charged.

With the HI Service and NASH we are promised that we will know who is accessing what and when they are doing that. This would be a great situation to have, with robust professional authentication, when negotiating the relevant licensing conditions with information providers.

We know the CIAP program has been especially useful to the more remote practitioners and a true nationwide extension would be not only be good clinically (CIAP has been evaluated and found to improve care) and better would be something that might bring faster adoption of the HI Service and NASH as there would be a reason for practitioners to adopt using the identifiers and credentials.

Sadly I fear this might just be too sensible to actually happen. Pity!

David.

Tuesday, February 01, 2011

What Value Does Academic Research Bring to the E-Health Table? Some Of It Brings Very Little Is My View!

There seems to have been a bit of a rush of academic studies that are suggesting the use of EHRs is not associated with any improvements in the quality and safety of care delivered.

The following summarises the issue

EHRs and the quality conundrum

January 27, 2011 — 2:55pm ET | By Janice Simmons - Contributing Editor

A quick peek at the past few days in the literature on whether electronic health records are capable of improving quality care shows EHRs taking it on the chin a few times. Despite the efforts and expense of installing EHRs in practices, EHRs are not improving overall quality as much as might be expected, several researchers said. But taking a closer look, it's important to ask ourselves: Are we all on the same page when it comes to defining quality?

After covering the issue of healthcare quality for the past two decades, it's become apparent to me that there's no one single definition of quality. It can mean many things, such as improving the overall well-being of a patient, or creating a better standard of living for a group of individuals or a population.

What we all can agree on, though, is that achieving quality care is an important goal. But exactly how do we monitor and measure it--and can EHRs provide the means to do it?

In a study appearing online in the Jan. 24 issue of the Archives of Internal Medicine, Stanford University researchers Max Romano and Randall Stafford, MD, PhD, reviewed guideline adherence for 250,000 outpatient visits using data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and from the National Hospital Ambulatory Medical Care Survey from 2005 to 2007.

Overall, what they found was that among 20 indexes of care quality, only diet counseling for high-risk adults showed "significantly better performance" in visits where EHRs were used when compared with visits using other types of record-keeping systems. "There were no other significant quality differences" regarding the clinical benefits of EHRs and clinical decision support, they said.

However, in a commentary appearing in the same journal, two National Library of Medicine (NLM) researchers--Clement McDonald, MD, and Swapna Abhyankar, MD--said that they suspected that the EHR and clinical decision support systems in use at the time of Stanford study were "immature," failed to cover many of the guidelines that the study targeted, and had incomplete patient data.

They also said that EHRs without clinical decision support do not affect guideline adherence because without that support, "most EHRs function primarily as data repositories that gather, organize, and display patient data--not as prods to action."

Most of the guidelines in the Stanford study concerned medication use, but none dealt with such areas as immunizations or screening tests. "In our experience, care providers are less willing to accept and act on automated reminders about initiating long-term drug therapy than about ordering a single test or an immunization," they wrote.

In another study appearing online Jan. 18 in the Public Library of Science (PLoS), British researchers--looking at the use of eHealth technologies including EHRs--said that little empirical evidence was found to substantiate their claims of quality and safety.

More here:

http://www.fierceemr.com/story/ehrs-and-quality-conundrum/2011-01-27

Extra details of the studies are provided here:

Stanford researchers find EHRs don't boost care quality


By Joseph Conn

Posted: January 25, 2011 - 11:15 am ET

A pair of researchers at Stanford University, Palo Alto, Calif., has released results of a three-year study that indicates EHRs did little to improve the quality of care.

"There's a lot of enthusiasm and money being invested in electronic health records," senior author Dr. Randall Stafford said in a news release. "It makes sense, but on the other hand it's an unproven proposition. When the federal government decides to invest in healthcare technology because it will improve the quality of care, that's not based on evidence. That's a presumption."

Stafford is an associate professor of medicine at the Stanford Prevention Research Center. A seven-page article based on the study, "Electronic health records and clinical decision support systems: Impact on national ambulatory care quality," appears online in the Archives of Internal Medicine.

In the new study, Stafford and former Stanford undergraduate student Max Romano, who is now a medical student at Johns Hopkins University in Baltimore, analyzed data from nearly 250,000 patient visits in 2005 through 2007. They looked at whether computerized, clinical decision-support tools in EHR systems improved the quality of care.

Their conclusions? There was "no consistent association between EHRs and CDS and better quality," according to the report. "These results raise concerns about the ability of health information technology to fundamentally alter outpatient-care quality."

More here:

http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20110125/NEWS/301259986/

Here is a comment from the site

Steveno

I think that this study was done too soon to accurately gauge how effective an EHR will be in improving the quality of medical care. The clinical decision-support tools are still too new, and as Dr Stafford noted, "These are complicated systems used by individuals who have received little formal training, at least until recently." Once the training has been completed and the physicians, nurses, pharmacists, and all other medical ancillary personnel increase their expertise is using these systems, quality of medical care should increase. The magnitude of the increase will still be determined by each individual on the health care team by how well they do their job. These tools and systems will make those tasks easier to do and will have the capability to highlight possible errors. We just need a little bit of patience with the industry as the systems come together and everyone starts to use the systems effectively. A similar study in the next decade should provide a much better picture as to how much an EHR did to improve medical care.

And here:

January 21, 2011, 12:34 PM ET

Study Looks For, Can’t Find Much Evidence of E-Health’s Benefits

With the U.S. and the U.K. heading full steam towards electronic medical records and other health IT applications, how much evidence is there that they improve care?

Not a whole lot, according to a review of existing research on the topic published this week by PLoS Medicine. While governments and other proponents are claiming that digitizing health records can save lives and increase efficiency, the review’s “key conclusion is that these claims need to be scrutinized before people invest quite large sums of money in these technologies,” Aziz Sheikh, lead author of the study and a professor of primary care research and development at the Center for Population Health Sciences at the University of Edinburgh, tells the Health Blog.

Sheikh and his colleagues scrutinized 53 reviews of the evidence surrounding technologies including electronic medical records, computerized provider order entry and computerized decision-support systems. The strength of the evidence varied from technology to technology, but in general the review found that “many of the clinical claims made about the most commonly deployed [digital health] technologies cannot be substantiated by the empirical evidence,” the authors write.

More here:

http://blogs.wsj.com/health/2011/01/21/study-looks-for-cant-find-much-evidence-of-e-healths-benefits/

Regular readers will remember some comments on a paper with a similar message here:

http://aushealthit.blogspot.com/2011/01/this-is-sure-to-get-lot-of-coverage.html

And regular readers will also remember my comments on this latter study found here:

http://aushealthit.blogspot.com/2011/01/here-is-another-study-that-will-stir.html

All this in the last month prompted me to wonder just what might be happening here and why we are seeing such a diversity of study outcomes.

The first point that needs to be made is that there is a pretty large evidence base supporting the use of EHRs. The Agency for Health Care Research and Quality (AHRQ) has assembled a good range of this material.

The key elements of this - and studies of accepted high quality - can be found here:

http://healthit.ahrq.gov/portal/server.pt/community/knowledge_library/653/health_it_bibliography/12790

There are a large range of topics covered with the coverage of clinical decision support being most useful.

There are a few defining characteristics of these reports as best I can tell.

1. They are all retrospective analyses of data that was created for other purposes and with other intended uses - i.e. the research core data was not collected with the study in mind to ensure relevance and accuracy for that purpose.

2. They are typically at least 4-5 years behind current practice

3. They are all relying on large data sets that are not all that well defined or definable.

Additionally it could be there is a bias in news reporting for bad outcomes and hence we hear more about these studies.

To me this is not the way science progresses. We need work undertaken that is prospective, designed to answer specific questions that are actually clearly defined and capable of answer, and work that actually addresses current practice.

It is clear some work of this sort has been analysed by the AHRQ and found to be quite at odds with these reports cited above. My view is that well designed, prospective and controlled studies will show quality Health IT makes a positive difference. What is really needed is for more analysis of the successful implementations around the world to be undertaken. Of course those with the successes are more interested in improving rather spending time touting their success so it may be we do not hear enough about them (Kaiser, Intermountain and Partners come to mind - they publish but maybe not enough to get their message out!).

The successes in Africa with the use of simple systems to better manage AIDS care similarly argues that simple things done well can really help!

I simply do not believe the studies cited above are example of what I would call anywhere near conclusive evidence - as the authors to their credit point out. More better work is needed to nail this!

I advise a very critical and sceptical mind-frame looking at e-Health research - especially aggregate studies of disparate entities and functionality.

Health IT has enough issues to address in utility, quality and safety without having to respond to methodologically challenged research!

David.