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."

Tuesday, January 05, 2010

A Debate (And A Response) You Would Never See Happen Here! More is the Pity!

The following appeared a few days before Christmas.

Gov't. groups keep quiet on closed-door meetings

By Joseph Conn / HITS staff writer

Posted: December 23, 2009 - 11:00 am ET

HHS and the Obama administration's Office of Science and Technology Policy are standing firm about a recent series of closed-door meetings on health IT policy.

Either they are not responding to requests for citations of legal authority for closing the meetings, or, in one instance, saying the law didn't require the meeting to be open, but not providing the specific reason it was closed.

Neither have responded to the question of whether, in light of President Barack Obama's recent order to foster openness and transparency in government, it was appropriate to close the meetings even if they had legal authority to do so.

Meanwhile, a healthcare information technology professional and disgruntled federal IT policy observer said he has filed a request under the federal Freedom of Information Act for copies of agendas and minutes of the most recent meetings.

“I'm a stickler for following the rules,” said Brian Ahier, a health IT professional, IT blogger and a member of the city council in the Dalles, Ore., who as a public official routinely complies with what he describes as a strict state open-door law. Ahier has written and posted protests about the closed-door sessions.

“With billions of dollars of stimulus funds on the line, and major stakeholders represented on these committees and work groups, it is imperative to avoid even a whiff of impropriety,” Ahier wrote.

I'm really concerned that the spirit of the open government directive is being violated here,” Ahier said in a telephone interview.

At issue is an interpretation of the Federal Advisory Committee Act, or FACA, and the applicability of federal open-door rules to the work groups and subcommittees of FACA advisory panels.

For decades, the government has relied on the advice of committees of subject-matter experts and advocates. Today, the government sponsors more than 1,000 FACA advisory panels, according to histories of their organization and explanations of their operations at two Web sites maintained by the Committee Management Secretariat at the General Services Administration.

The secretariat provides training and guidance for various government officials on setting up and running FACA panels. The FACA requires that for most advisory committee meetings public notice and the agenda of a meeting be published in advance and the meetings themselves be held in public. If a meeting isn't open, the notice should cite one of 10 specific “sunshine law” exceptions under which meetings appropriately can be closed, according to Kennett Fussell, deputy director of the secretariat.

Vastly more here (free registration required):

http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20091223/REG/312239986

This was then followed up here:

Blumenthal pledges openness in HIT discussions

By Mary Mosquera

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT will open to the public the meetings of small workgroups within its advisory Health IT Policy and Standards committees starting Jan. 1.

“We want to do more to bring you into the conversation,” said Dr. David Blumenthal, the national health IT coordinator, in a blog post http://healthit.hhs.gov/blog/onc/ today to the health IT community.

Currently, the work group gatherings, which concentrate on specific issues in health IT, such as security and privacy and the nationwide health information network, are not always public.

Some publications and bloggers have called out the ONC for not being open enough.

“I am committed to open and transparent discussion of issues critical to achieving ONC’s goals of promoting adoption and meaningful use of health information technology,” Blumenthal wrote.

More here:

http://govhealthit.com/newsitem.aspx?nid=72797

Wouldn’t it be nice if there were a ‘sunshine law’ in Australia so we could all contribute to seeking some better, more clinically relevant and more practical ways forward here.

It is also evidence of the quality of the US governance of Health IT that Dr. David Blumenthal, the national health IT coordinator quickly made sure openness was maximised. I wonder will something line that ever happen with NEHTA?

The following seems to be sort of strategic shift that could help in Australia - rather than having all those mega clinician unfriendly implementations we seem to be blest with.

DH shifts IT from 'replace' to 'connect'

22 Dec 2009

NHS informatics in England will move from a “replace all” to “connect all” philosophy, the Department of Health has announced.

Informatics planning guidance for 2010-11 says an updated strategic direction for informatics will be developed over the coming months to reflect the change in emphasis.

The guidance says a new direction has also been agreed for the National Programme for IT in the NHS, which will give the NHS more involvement in decision-making on the scope and timing of implementations.

It also sets out a series of expectations that local community operating plans for 2010-11 must deliver. The guidance says these have updated from previous years because compliant software is now more widely available. The expectations include:

Risk-assessed plans of how and when each of the Clinical 5 will be used by all the clinicians in a local health community and whether the systems will be procured via local service providers or the Additional Supply Capability and Capacity framework.

A timeline for the creation of Summary Care Records at all SCR-complaint GP practices in the 2010-11 financial year.

Plans to complete NHS COnnecting for Health preparations for the implementation of Release 2 of the Electronic Prescription Service.

Plans demonstrating how digital capabilities are being actively developed to support improved patient experience, such as promoting the use of NHS Choices and providing tools to help clinicians and managers use feedback to improve quality.

The informatics planning guidance reflects the themes of the Operating Framework for the NHS In England 2010-11, which was issued by NHS chief executive David Nicholson last week.

More here:

http://www.ehiprimarycare.com/news/5495/dh_shifts_it_from_%27replace%27_to_%27connect%27

The key issue I see is that if you have bureaucrats beavering away, essentially in secret, you are doomed to get what we are getting.

If the decision making and consultation processes could be more transparent, open, consultative and responsive we might do a good deal better.

More New Year dreaming I guess.

David.

Monday, January 04, 2010

It Seems Everything Old Has Become New Again.

For reasons I do not understand the following appeared as news a few days ago, but the reminder was useful!

NEHTA looks offshore to end e-health delays

Skills review to be completed by February 2008

Struggling to recruit the necessary IT skills base required to push forward Australia's e-health reform agenda, the National E-Health Transition Authority (NEHTA) is looking to offshore outsourcing and other contractual measures to fill the resources gap.

Admitting the national IT skills shortage will result in serious "delays in delivery" for Australia's e-health framework, NEHTA is currently operating up to 50 per cent under budget due to recruiting delays.

The decision to look offshore for IT staff is necessary to ensure the implementation of electronic health records can begin in 2008 and follows an independent review of Australia's e-health framework by the Boston Consulting Group (BCG). The review examined NEHTA's progress since it was established in 2005 and found "labour capacity constraints" in the local market has forced timelines to be revised.

According to the BCG report e-health reforms are suffering from significant staffing shortfalls pointing out that: "ongoing shortfalls during the current financial year is likely to cause irreversible delivery delays. The biggest challenge has been recruiting staff and the increased resources required is extraordinary, roughly a doubling of personnel spend every year up until 2009."

This shortage has made it impossible to put standards in place for secure messaging with the report claiming NEHTA has been unable to "engage with users and standard bodies or build up accreditation or compliance."

To address the problem funding has increased to over $1.5 million in the 2007/8 financial year to try and overcome "under-resourcing issues" for the development of secure messaging standards.

A review is also underway to identify areas in urgent need of staffing and is expected to reach completion in February 2008.

.....

Responding to the skills crisis, NEHTA today released an action plan for the implementation of electronic medical records in 2008.

The Board of NEHTA has endorsed a business case for developing a national platform for personal electronic health records to be put to the Council of Australian Governments (COAG) early next year.

.....

The NEHTA action plan outlines key areas for the adoption of measures to improve the electronic communication of critical health information.

NEHTA has been tasked with Australia's e-health reforms since it was established in 2005, and the body's chair Dr Tony Sherbon, said it is now in a position to deliver some concrete applications. Sherbon said the government's emphasis on the provision and use of broadband communications will assist NEHTA in advancing e-health. "The recent independent review found NEHTA had made significant progress on our goals to date and made a number of recommendations about NEHTA's future. The action plan we are announcing today flows directly from our acceptance of all the recommendations in the review," he said.

The review also called for closer consultation with stakeholders. Health industry professionals and the IT industry described NEHTA's engagement style as "dogmatic" with the review recommending implementation programs with bodies such as the Australian Medical Association, Royal Australian College of General Practitioners, Australian Association of Pathology Practices, various Divisions of General Practice and the Rural Doctors Association of Australia

Dr Sherbon identified the action plan as also being an acknowledgement of where NEHTA now needs to go in order to expedite e-health reform in Australia. "We have come to a point where many of the foundations to enable e-health are in a position where we can now move towards implementation and adoption," he said.

NEHTA's Board of Directors is composed of the heads of all nine government health departments in Australia. NEHTA's Action Plan for Adoption Success and the independent review of NEHTA conducted by the Boston Consulting Group are available on the NEHTA website at www.nehta.gov.au.

The full article is found here:

http://www.computerworld.com.au/article/202851/nehta_looks_offshore_end_e-health_delays/?pp=1

Bold emphasis is mine.

Note the date carefully. This is over 2 years ago and it is fair to say that as far as Electronic Patient Records are concerned there has been no detectable progress at all. Practical outcomes with anything else are still rather hard to identify 2 years later. One really wonders just what the public is paying for with NEHTA?

It is absolutely obvious that Dr Sherbon clearly had no idea what he was talking about (many foundations now in position and so on!) and no clue about the issues that stand in the way of the progress he was hoping for. I hope the new chairman has a much better grasp of reality. However labelling 2009 as the “Year of Delivery” suggests not a great deal has been learnt.

I wonder what 2010 holds for all of this. It’s a new year so let us be optimistic at least until we are in the situation of the individual marrying for the third time where the realise they are the victim of ‘Hope triumphing over experience’.

Happy New Year!

David.

Sunday, January 03, 2010

A Powerful Lesson on How to do e-Health Properly.

The following appeared in the New England Journal of Medicine over the holidays.

Launching HITECH

Posted by NEJM • December 30th, 2009 • Printer-friendly

David Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.P.

Information is the lifeblood of modern medicine. Health information technology (HIT) is destined to be its circulatory system. Without that system, neither individual physicians nor health care institutions can perform at their best or deliver the highest-quality care, any more than an Olympian could excel with a failing heart. Yet the proportion of U.S. health care professionals and hospitals that have begun the transition to electronic health information systems is remarkably small.1,2

On December 30, the government took several critical steps toward a nationwide, interoperable, private, and secure electronic health information system. The Department of Health and Human Services (DHHS) released two proposed regulations affecting HIT (www.healthit.hhs.gov and http://www.federalregister.gov/inspection.aspx#special). The first, a notice of proposed rule-making (NPRM), describes how hospitals, physicians, and other health care professionals can qualify for billions of dollars of extra Medicare and Medicaid payments through the meaningful use of electronic health records (EHRs). The second, an interim final regulation, describes the standards and certification criteria that those EHRs must meet for their users to collect the payments. In addition, between August and December 2009, my office — the DHHS Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) — announced nearly $2 billion worth of new programs to help providers become meaningful users of EHRs and to lay the groundwork for an advanced electronic health information system. All these actions were authorized by the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, which was part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, also known as the stimulus bill (see table).3

The provisions of the HITECH Act are best understood not as investments in technology per se but as efforts to improve the health of Americans and the performance of their health care system. The installation of EHRs is an important first step. But EHRs will accomplish little unless providers use them to their full potential; unless health data can flow freely, privately, and securely to the places where they are needed; and unless HIT becomes increasingly capable and easy to use.

Understanding this, Congress and the Obama administration structured the HITECH Act so as to reward the meaningful use of qualified, certified EHRs — an innovative and powerful concept. By focusing on the effective use of EHRs with certain capabilities, the HITECH Act makes clear that the adoption of records is not a sufficient purpose: it is the use of EHRs to achieve health and efficiency goals that matters.

The effort to achieve meaningful use provides the best lens through which to understand the government’s actions in implementing the HITECH Act. The administration is trying to do four basic things: define meaningful use, encourage and support the attainment of meaningful use through incentives and grant programs, bolster public trust in electronic information systems by ensuring their privacy and security, and foster continued HIT innovation.

The full and detailed article is available (freely) here:

http://healthcarereform.nejm.org/?p=2669&query=TOC

For e-Health in the US, and by some considerable trickle down to us I suspect, this is the biggest and most important policy statement I have seen!

If the turkeys who run Australian e-Health had anything like some brains they would be reading closely and working out how they can use similar Government policy levers to achieve similar results.

It is really pretty much all here in my view. Incentives, incremental improvement, clinician driven and the list goes on.

We have wasted a decade and it has taken the Obama administration a little less than a year to legislate funds and start serious work.

It would be real fun to be in US Health IT right now.

Go read the article closely to see just how much is being done in all the right area (training, standards etc).

This is the biggest thing in e-Health since the UK Government launched Information for Health a decade ago and kicked off the National Program for Health IT. This is genuine e-Health history in the making I believe.

David.

AusHealthIT Man Poll Number 4 - Results

The question was:

What Chance Do You Think We Have For a Major Funding Boost to e-Health in the Next Year?

Results:

100% Chance of Major Funding Boost

- 3 Votes (10%)

75% Chance of Major Funding Boost

- 2 Votes (6%)

50% Chance of Major Funding Boost

- 6 Votes (20%)

25% Chance of Major Funding Boost

- 11 Votes (36%)

0% Chance of Major Funding Boost

- 8 Votes (26%)

Total Votes 30.

Comment:

So 75% of voters thought we were at 50% chance or less and over 50% gave the odds of a boost as being less than 25%.

It is hard to know where this is going without more resources. Right now blog readers do not see much joy on the horizon.

Thanks again to all who voted.

David.

Saturday, January 02, 2010

A Real Giggle To Start the Year - Serious Blogs Start Tomorrow!

While browsing I came upon this!

2009 NEHTA Grants Awarded!

Congratulations to the following recipients each awarded a $250.00 grant for expansion of HT programming:

The ARC of Blackstone Valley, Pawtucket, RI: Daggett Farm Greenhouse & Gift shop will expand its services to residents of Riverview Terrace apartments. Staff will offer classes at Riverview Terrace to elderly and disabled who have difficulty going into the community without assistance. Classes will be based on gardening in small spaces, such as indoor window boxes with interchangeable seasonal plants during the four seasons.

Winthrop University Hospital Child Life Program, Merrick, NY: For continuation of horticultural therapy services for hospitalized children at Hagedorn Pediatric Inpatient Center and for children with cancer and blood disorders who are being treated at Winthrop’s outpatient Cancer Center for Kids. Activities will be conducted for groups and bedside for children ages one and up through a “Nurture with Nature” approach.

See the wonderful logo here:

http://www.nehorticulturaltherapy.org/2009NEHTAGrantsAwarded.html

NEHTA is, of course, the North Eastern Horticultural Therapy Association (NEHTA).

I would never have guessed it. Maybe some grants from NEHTA in OZ could help some of their problems?

It sounds like the NEHTA of New England is doing kind, generous and caring things. One can only hope our version might, one day, follow suit!

Sorry this was too funny to let past, there is a message and I hope all readers have a really great 2010. It will be a big one, what with a Federal Election and all, - I wonder if Rudd and Roxon are up to it or will be sadly disappointed again?

David.

Wednesday, December 23, 2009

The Happy Christmas and Have a Great New Year Blog.

Just a short blog to wish all those who drop by the Season’s best.

It has been quite a year and much of the hope we stated it with has really yet to actually come to fruition, sadly.

The saddest things to me have been the consistent lack of leadership in the e-Health space and the persistent stupidity of the belief held by some really hopeless bureaucrats that something can happen without both quality leadership, some effective governance and some reasonable seeding investment.

The amount of time and effort that has been wasted because these three things were missing is terrible and the denial that is actually matters in terms of patient’s lives and limbs borders on the criminal in my view.

The good things this year have all been about the hardy souls in the commercial e-Health space who have been prepared to chance their arm and just go for it! They all know who they are so there is no point providing a list as I would be certain to leave some good guy or gal out!

I really hope 2010 can be a much better year for all concerned.

As a really amazing note, this is blog post number 1100. At least I hope I get a few points for effort!

Go well, be safe and have a great break.

I plan to be back typing away on January 4, 2010.

David

Tuesday, December 22, 2009

NSW Health Takes A Hit from the Australian Financial Review.

The following appeared today.

Fears for patients amid e-record troubles

The NSW government and senior health bureaucrats have been accused of putting the lives of patients at risk by ignoring the concerns of clinicians over the troubled deployment of the FirstNet electronic patient records and administration system.

The key points of the article are:

1. Some departments have reverted to using paper for patient records.

2. The concerns centre on the time it takes to enter and retrieve details.

More here (subscription required)

http://www.afr.com/p/business/technology/fears_for_patients_amid_record_troubles_Jt8sQPbgQ32PngTpFLFTmJ

Those who have been watching will know this issue was covered a while ago on the blog.

See:

http://aushealthit.blogspot.com/2009/11/nsw-health-cerner-and-professor-patrick.html

and here:

http://aushealthit.blogspot.com/2009/11/new-release-of-jon-patrick-essay-on.html

and here:

http://aushealthit.blogspot.com/2009/11/professor-patrick-releases-new-version.html

The opposition Health Spokesman in NSW (Ms Jillian Skinner) has apparently also been briefed on issues in the metro hospitals as well as the known issues at more regional hospitals.

As always the silence from NSW Health is deafening.

The mess just continues unfixed it seems.

Let me know if things are better anywhere so we can let people know.

David.

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links 23-12-2009

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.

-----

http://www.news-medical.net/news/20091216/Physicians-support-EHR-use-but-privacy-breaches-remain-an-issue.aspx

Physicians support EHR use, but privacy breaches remain an issue

16. December 2009 03:19

Although physicians support the use of electronic health records, concerns about potential privacy breaches remain an issue, according to two research articles published in the January 2010 issue of the Journal of the American Informatics Association (JAMIA), in its premiere issue as one of 30 specialty titles published by the BMJ (British Medical Journal) Group, UK.

One published study is based on views of more than 1,000 family practice and specialist physicians in Massachusetts who were asked whether they thought electronic health information exchange (HIE) would drive down costs, improve patient care, free up their time and preserve patient confidentiality. They were also asked whether they would be willing to pay a monthly fee to use the system.

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http://govhealthit.com/newsitem.aspx?nid=72733

Decision on tougher lab data standards put off to January

By Mary Mosquera

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

If the Department of Health and Human Services publishes a rule defining the meaningful use of electronic records this month, as expected, health providers will still have to wait for a key policy decision on standards to use to exchange lab test results.

Dr. David Blumenthal, the national coordinator for health IT, yesterday asked the advisory Health IT Policy Committee to defer until January a decision on whether to allow temporary variations in those standards to be used.

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http://www.healthdatamanagement.com/news/HIE_viability_survey_research_RHIO-39535-1.html

What Makes HIEs Viable?

HDM Breaking News, December 17, 2009

Results from a national survey of regional health information organizations show simplicity and early funding commitments from participants improve viability of the initiatives.

Researchers from Harvard University, Brigham and Women's Hospital and Boston Veterans Affairs Hospital surveyed all known RHIOs in the United States in mid-2008. They examined two main outcome measures: whether the RHIO was operational and the percent of operating costs covered by revenue from participants.

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http://www.modernhealthcare.com/article/20091218/REG/312189986

New technology a 'push' toward EHR future

By Joseph Conn / HITS staff writer

Posted: December 18, 2009 - 5:59 am EDT

There is a push going on for push messaging, a likely first step in rolling out a proposed national health information network in time for healthcare organizations to use electronic health-record systems in a “meaningful manner” and qualify for federal EHR subsidy payments under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

In late October, David Blumenthal, head of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology at HHS called for pause in the planning of the NHIN.

Earlier this week, in testimony before a federal healthcare IT advisory panel, on blogs and postings to online discussions, what is beginning to emerge is the outline of what the healthcare IT world was put on hold to wait for, an outline of a “lighter” NHIN than has been the focus of much planning and development work in the past.

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http://www.e-health-insider.com/news/5480/ehrs_deliver_soft_benefits_for_hard_cash

EHRs deliver soft benefits for hard cash

16 Dec 2009

Electronic health record and e-prescribing systems deliver benefits such as safer and more convenient services, but only over long periods of time and with a net increase in spending, a major European study has concluded.

The final report of the European Commission EHR IMPACT study pulls together more than 700 indicators of cost and benefit derived from detailed case studies of 11 EHR and e-prescribing systems in use in Europe, the US and Israel.

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Keeping a SHARP Focus on Innovation

December 18, 2009

A Message from Dr. David Blumenthal, National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

Today the Obama administration announced the availability of $60 million in Recovery Act funds to support the development of the Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects (SHARP) program. SHARP awards will fund research focused on identifying technology solutions to address well-documented problems impeding broad adoption of health information technology (health IT). By helping to overcome key challenges, the research will also accelerate progress towards achieving nationwide meaningful use of health IT.

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http://www.ehiprimarycare.com/news/5463/stalis_standalone_e-discharge_summary

Stalis standalone e-discharge summary

11 Dec 2009

Stalis has launched a clinical e-discharge solution to allow NHS trusts that do not have discharge summary functionality built into their patient administration system to produce immediate summaries for patients.

The company has made the CareXML/eDS product available after finding that many trusts are unlikely to hit the government’s April 2010 target for delivering discharge summaries to GPs within 24 hours.

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http://www.who.int/goe/ehir/2009/15_december_2009/en/index.html

15 December 2009

eHealth Worldwide

:: China - E-health in China, our practice and exploration. (8 December 2009 - IEEE Engineering in Medicine and Biology Society)
China started to pay more attention to regional and national health information network construction after the SARS epidemic outbreak in 2003. The Chinese government marks the public health system construction as the most urgent part of national medical reform, with information and computer tech-nology(ICT) being considered as the key of deploying regional collaborative medical service(RCMS), which is also known as e-Health. In this paper, we firstly analyze the difficulties of carrying out e-health projects in China and then present the active attempts, finally a case representing current progress is presented and studied.

Heaps more follows.

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http://www.information-management.com/news/health_information_exchange-10016678-1.html

Are HIEs the Answer?

Alternatives to regional health information exchanges are emerging

Information Management Online, December 9, 2009

Joseph Goedert

The numbers are daunting. Nearly two decades after the advent of community health information networks and more than five years after the Bush Administration starting pushing for electronic health records and health information exchanges, only 28 states have one or more operational HIEs. And operational doesn't mean everyone in a region, much less a state, is active in the HIE.

In a nation of 300 million residents over 3.5 million square miles, there are 193 HIEs in various stages of development, according to eHealth Initiative, a Washington-based industry advocacy organization. By self-attestation, 57 of the HIEs are operational. Most HIEs don't have a sustainable business model, and getting a critical mass of regional stakeholders to cooperate in exchanging their data remains an extremely difficult proposition.

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http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/243427/topic/WS_HLM2_TEC/Top-10-Smartphone-App-Trends-for-2010.html

Top 10 Smartphone App Trends for 2010

Cynthia Johnson, December 11, 2009

Many chief information officers have smartphones on the top of their 2009 wish list. The compact mobile devices combine online access to information with PDA (personal digital assistant) functionality, making them perfect for on-the-go clinicians.

According to a report by market-research firm Manhattan Research, the number of physicians who own smartphones will increase from 64% to 81% by 2012. The October 2009 report states that the ability to complete tasks remotely will become even more indispensible to physicians in the future.

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http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/content/243567/topic/WS_HLM2_TEC/Facilities-Use-Cloud-Computing-to-Share-Radiology-Images.html

Facilities Use Cloud Computing to Share Radiology Images

Carrie Vaughan, for HealthLeaders Media, December 15, 2009

It started with a simple goal: to send radiology images to healthcare facilities throughout Montana in a manner that was cheaper and more efficient than using FedEx to mail CDs overnight. About 30 healthcare organizations in Montana joined the grassroots organization called the Image Movement of Montana.

The group needed a solution that would work not only for more tech savvy facilities with picture archiving and communications systems, but also for folks who don't have PACS and would need to access images on a PC, says Gayle Knudson, radiology manager at Great Falls Clinic and IMOM co-founder.

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http://www.ihealthbeat.org/features/2009/nurses-claim-their-seat-at-the-health-it-decisionmaking-table.aspx

Tuesday, December 15, 2009

Nurses Claim Their Seat at the Health IT Decision-Making Table

Many of the policy discussions about health IT appear to focus almost exclusively on how such systems might affect physicians and physician workflow. We're hearing a lot about computerized physician order entry systems, physician performance measurement and physician incentives for electronic health record adoption.

But what about nurses?

Although they might not get as much press time, nurses are actively taking a seat at the table and participating in federal discussions about best practices, standards and the meaningful use of EHRs.

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Patient consent and 'granular' privacy control ties

By Joseph Conn / HITS staff writer

Posted: December 14, 2009 - 11:00 am EDT

Part two of a two-part series (Access part one):

The online culture is changing, shifting toward affording individuals more control over their personal information, as evidenced by the rollout last week of revisions to the privacy and security policies and technological framework by Facebook, a popular personal media site.

Privacy and IT industry experts interviewed for this story say the fine-grained levels of personal control incorporated by Facebook demonstrate a "proof of concept" that a similar, so-called "granular" consent-management system could provide a template for personalized privacy protection in the healthcare industry.

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http://www.google.com/hostednews/ap/article/ALeqM5hHDt7MH7Tw3xYTQXK908rSk2zcNgD9CGNKJG0

Sens. move to block drugmakers from mining Rx data

By MATTHEW PERRONE (AP) – 4 days ago

WASHINGTON — Drug companies would no longer be able to mine pharmacy records to track which doctors are prescribing their medications, under a proposal unveiled Thursday by two Senate Democrats.

The amendment to the Senate health care bill would effectively ban pharmaceutical data mining, the drug company practice of buying prescription records to target sales pitches to doctors.

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http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/missouri-hospital-saves-lives-virtual-icu-technology

Missouri hospital saves lives with virtual ICU technology

December 11, 2009 | Diana Manos, Senior Editor

JEFFERSON CITY, MO – St. Mary's Health Center, an SSM Health Care facility in Jefferson City, Mo., reports success with the use of a virtual ICU program, used in conjunction with its in-house program.

At the Institute for Healthcare Improvement National Forum, Dec. 9-12 in Orlando, Fla., executives from St. Mary's announced results of its virtual use of ICU technology to improve mortality rates, lengths of stay and quality measures. Since St. Mary's launched its use of virtual ICU technology in 2006, ICU mortality dropped by 24 percent after one year; cardiac arrests plunged by 69 percent; ICU patient total length of stay fell by 14 percent; and there were no cases of ventilator-associated pneumonia (VAP) since the program's inception.

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http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/electronic-health-records-not-panacea-researchers-say

Electronic health records not a panacea, researchers say

December 14, 2009 | Diana Manos, Senior Editor

LONDON – Large-scale electronic health record projects promise much, but sometimes deliver little, according to a new study.

In a study published Monday in the U.S. journal Milbank Quarterly, researchers at the University College of London (UCL) said they identified fundamental and often overlooked tensions in the design and implementation of EHRs. The study was based on findings from hundreds of previous studies from all over the world.

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http://www.milbank.org/quarterly/8704feat.html

Tensions and Paradoxes in Electronic Patient Record Research: A Systematic Literature Review Using the Meta-narrative Method

Trisha Greenhalgh, Henry W.W. Potts, Geoff Wong, Pippa Bark, and Deborah Swinglehurst

University College London

Context: The extensive research literature on electronic patient records (EPRs) presents challenges to systematic reviewers because it covers multiple research traditions with different underlying philosophical assumptions and methodological approaches.

Methods: Using the meta-narrative method and searching beyond the Medline-indexed literature, this review used “conflicting” findings to address higher-order questions about how researchers had differently conceptualized and studied the EPR and its implementation.

Findings: Twenty-four previous systematic reviews and ninety-four further primary studies were considered. Key tensions in the literature centered on (1) the EPR (“container” or “itinerary”); (2) the EPR user (“information-processer” or “member of socio-technical network”); (3) organizational context (“the setting within which the EPR is implemented” or “the EPR-in-use”); (4) clinical work (“decision making” or “situated practice”); (5) the process of change (“the logic of determinism” or “the logic of opposition”); (6) implementation success (“objectively defined” or “socially negotiated”); and (7) complexity and scale (“the bigger the better” or “small is beautiful”).

Conclusions: The findings suggest that EPR use will always require human input to recontextualize knowledge; that even though secondary work (audit, research, billing) may be made more efficient by the EPR, primary clinical work may be made less efficient; that paper may offer a unique degree of ecological flexibility; and that smaller EPR systems may sometimes be more efficient and effective than larger ones. We suggest an agenda for further research.

Keywords: Systematic review, electronic patient records, innovation.

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http://www.fiercehealthit.com/story/medco-pay-pharmacists-closing-medication-loop/2009-12-14?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal

Medco to pay pharmacists for closing medication loop

December 14, 2009 — 3:19pm ET | By Neil Versel

Pharmacy benefits manager Medco Health Solutions will deliver electronic alerts to pharmacies for patients who may not be following their doctors' orders and pay as many as 100 pharmacists in Illinois for coordinating care with physicians and counseling patients with chronic conditions. Medco also will work with the Illinois Pharmacists Association, the University of Illinois at Chicago (UIC) College of Pharmacy and Mirixa, a pharmacy-based patient care network, to study the efforts to close gaps in medication adherence over the course of a 26-week trial period.

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http://www.fiercehealthit.com/story/quaid-draws-plenty-attention-health-it-do-many-people-really-care/2009-12-14?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal

Quaid draws attention to health IT, but do people really care?

December 14, 2009 — 11:52am ET | By Neil Versel

Editors Choice

I've been thinking for some time now that in our celebrity-driven culture, it would take a big Hollywood name to latch on to health IT in order to get the masses--and the mainstream media--to make the connection between information technology and patient safety. A few candidates had been involuntarily brought to the fore with regards to EMR security breaches--Britney Spears, George Clooney and the dearly departed Farrah Fawcett come to mind--but I've been waiting for Dennis Quaid to make a splash.

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http://www.itweb.co.za/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=28898:health-smart-card-progress-stalls&catid=69:business&Itemid=58

Health smart card progress stalls

By Audra Mahlong, Journalist

Johannesburg, 14 Dec 2009

Health MEC Qedani Mahlangu has instructed lawyers to appeal the court's decision and prevent any payouts to the private consulting firm.

The Gauteng Health Department has been instructed to pay over R40 million to 3P Consulting for breach of contract and outstanding payments – delaying any decisions on the progress of its R609 million health smart card tender.

Health MEC Qedani Mahlangu noted that she would fight the decision of the Gauteng South High Court, and added that the money the department would have to pay 3P consulting would affect other projects.

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http://www.hc2d.co.uk/content.php?contentId=13541

iSoft ORMIS for Leicestershire provider

16th December 2009

NHS Leicestershire County and Rutland Community Health Services has implemented a wireless electronic patient record system which will provide paper-free processes in operating rooms across five of its hospitals.

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Enjoy!

David.