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HDM Breaking News, October 5, 2011
A number of industries have started to create the position of chief knowledge officer, responsible for making good use of the increasing amount of data available.
It’s time for the CKO position to come to health care, with the C-level moniker more than name-only, according to Cindy Zak, director of health information management and privacy officer at Milford (Conn.) Hospital. “The CKO is a change agent, an ambassador using knowledge to bring change to the organization,” she said during a session at the AHIMA 2011 Convention & Exhibit in Salt Lake City. “The CKO needs to report to the CEO.”
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Written by Bob Mitchell
October 4, 2011
SALT LAKE CITY—Managing information in the 21st century and whether to code or not to code was the keynote address presented Oct. 4 at the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) conference by T. Bedirhan Ustun, MD, PhD, team coordinator of classification, terminology and standards in the department of health statistics at the World Health Organization (WHO).
“Procrastinating over ICD-10 is not a good thing. It is more wrong to not make the transition,” he said. “Healthcare is a very high information-intensive sector and integration is needed. Healthcare information is of vital importance for its patient safety, quality and efficiency.”
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October 05, 2011 | Mary Mosquera
The number of physicians and hospitals that have registered for the Medicare or Medicaid electronic health record (EHR) incentive program has surpassed 100,000, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
As of the end of September, 88,399 physicians and hospitals have signed up for the Medicare program, 24,030 for the Medicaid program and 2,215 hospitals that are eligible for both incentive programs, for a total of 114,644 registrants. In August, the count was 90,000. Thirty-three states have opened their Medicaid EHR incentive programs.
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National Association of State CIOs says HIEs won't be sustainable without new ways to generate revenue and cut costs.
October 04, 2011
The National Association of State Chief Information Officers (NASCIO) is urging state CIOs who are developing health information exchanges (HIEs) to improve their business strategy. That strategy has to generate revenue to cover operational costs and provide sustainability for these exchanges, before the public funds that they have already received run out.
State-run HIEs are fundamental to the vision of a new healthcare delivery system that electronically exchanges patient data securely among providers, payers, and other healthcare stakeholders, and their numbers have grown substantially, according to NASCIO. In July 2010, there were approximately 37 public health information exchanges, now there are 67. The number of private exchanges has increased from 52 to 161.
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October 07, 2011 | Jeff Rowe, HITECH Watch
One of the questions long underlying the HIT transition is the “field of dreams” question: If you build EHRs, will the people come?
This long-time observer reviews a number of recent consumer surveys and answers with a fairly resounding “Yes”.
For starters, she cites a 2011 Intuit poll in which three-quarters of respondents said they “would use a secure online tool to make it easier to communicate with the doctor's office. Furthermore, one-half of those interested in online access to doctors would consider switching doctors to one whose office offered secure online access.”
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October 05, 2011 | Jeff Rowe, HITECH Watch
Since at least the creation of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, it’s been quite clear that the federal government was going to play a major role in the evolution of health IT across the country.
Now, at least one observer is predicting that, particularly when it comes to the matter of regulating new technology, the federal role is going to get even larger.
As he puts it, “FDA’s exemption for EHRs seems headed the way of the dodo bird.” Two “opposing” trends, he notes, will ultimately be responsible for the Food & Drug Administration’s full-scale entry into the arena of EHR regulation.
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Gienna Shaw, for HealthLeaders Media , October 6, 2011
The federal government will spend nearly $1.4 million to determine "whether and when" providers can share patients' data and to figure out how best to share electronic health data between patients and providers.
In a 36-page document, the Office of the National Coordinators' Office of the Chief Privacy Officer outlines a number of questions and tasks for the contractor, APP Design, Inc., with partnering with providers to creating pilot programs to answering a number of questions about how to engage patients and educate them about their electronic health data.
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HDM Breaking News, October 6, 2011
The passing of Apple Computer's Steve Jobs has many in the health information technology industry reflecting on his impact. Among them:
Girish Navani, CEO and co-founder of eClinicalWorks:
Every entrepreneur thinks of Steve Jobs when building his or her business. His passing leaves behind a feeling of deep loss, especially at the knowledge that it will be another generation before the world finds another like him. Jobs was a leader, visionary and a perfectionist, and I am deeply saddened."
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5 October 2011
Humber NHS Foundation Trust has confirmed it is now the early adopter for Lorenzo mental health care management and said that its staff are “impressed” with the system.
A trust spokesperson told eHealth Insider that the functionality of the system, which is due to be delivered by CSC as the local service provider for the North, Midlands and East of England, would help it to deliver its informatics strategy.
“Our staff have reviewed Lorenzo and are impressed with the product. We are looking forward to using the rich functionality provided by Lorenzo to modernise our mental health information systems,” they added in a statement.
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In an exclusive interview with eHealth Insider editor Jon Hoeksma, Katie Davis, the managing director of NHS Informatics, says her priority is to ‘connect all’ on the foundations of the defunct NPfIT.
5 October 2011
In her first interview since taking up post in July, Katie Davis, the managing director of NHS Informatics, says her focus is delivering the government’s ‘connect all’ agenda for NHS IT.
The ‘connect all’ philosophy was first set out in the Operating Framework for the NHS in England 2010-11 in December 2009, and reiterated by health minister Simon Burns at the end of a review of the National Programme for IT in the NHS last September.
So it is hardly new, and certainly not the outcome of the Cabinet Office review of NPfIT that was triggered by a critical National Audit Office report on the detailed care records element of the programme earlier this summer.
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It's too soon to know whether U.S. healthcare providers will jump on the IT bandwagon, but one thing's for certain: the U.K.'s health IT project was too top-heavy.
October 06, 2011
Perhaps the United Kingdom should have taken the U.S. approach to health IT. Seems like the Brits might be thinking that, too.
The failure of the United Kingdom's troubled, $20 billion-plus National Health Service National Programme for IT, launched in 2002 and officially declared dead last month, serves several lessons for the United States as it rolls out its own $27 billion health IT program.
Granted, the U.S.'s own $20 billion-plus Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health, or HITECH Act, stimulus program, set up to entice doctors and hospitals to trade in their paper patient charts for digitized record systems, is too young to call a success, or to predict being one.
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HDM Breaking News, October 3, 2011
A new initiative from the American Health Information Management Association seeks to create at least 40,000 HIM jobs to build and maintain electronic health records.
“The HIM Jobs for America” initiative is two-fold and builds off AHIMA’s ongoing work to provide HIM curricula to universities and community colleges.
Under a demonstration program, AHIMA is working with the HHS Office of Minority Health and North Shore Medical Labs in Williston, N.Y., to bring health I.T. to 100 small-practice physicians in underserved communities in Alabama, Mississippi and North Carolina. HHS has identified the communities, AHIMA will recruit physicians and provide free I.T. training to providers and staff, and North Shore will donate Web-based electronic health records/practice management/patient portal software from Nortec Software Inc.
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October 04, 2011 | Tom Sullivan, Editor
While an overwhelming percentage of organizations are talking about moving to the cloud, far fewer have actually made such a transition -- and even among those that have, more than half have found cloud technologies are not yielding the benefits they anticipated.
That’s according to Symantec’s State of Cloud Survey 2011. The security vendor published its results on Tuesday, finding that 75 to 81 percent of respondents are “at least discussing all forms of cloud,” according to Symantec. But despite that level of interest, fewer than “20 percent reported having completed implementing each of the cloud focus areas covered by the research.” Those being email services including management and security, security management, and Web and IM security.
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Investors sue U.S. contractor CSC, claiming it concealed its inability to complete failed $18 billion U.K. National EHR Program.
October 05, 2011
Two weeks after the official decision to kill the British government's plan to build a national health IT network for all 52 million residents of England, the repercussions are mounting.
On Monday, a group of shareholders filed a class-action suit in the United States against Falls Church, Va.-based contractor Computer Sciences Corp. (CSC), claiming that CSC "fraudulently concealed that it was incapable of delivering" on a 10-year, 3.1 billion British pound ($5.4 billion) contract with the United Kingdom's National Health Service (NHS).
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October 03, 2011 | David Kibbe, MD, Senior advisor at AAFP and principal at The Kibbe Group
On Friday September 22, 2011, members of the Direct Project Rules of the Road workgroup reached consensus on a key component of the trust framework necessary to make Direct exchange expand nationally and be available to more users.
The Certificate Policy, which governs the use of X.509 digital certificates within the ecosystem of potential Direct providers and users who are covered entities, business associates, and others abiding by HIPAA security and privacy rules, is now available for industry guidance of Direct exchange implementations.
The Direct Project is an ONC initiative formed in partnership with a diverse group of private sector stakeholders that included leading health IT companies, several Health Information Exchanges, the American Academy of Family Physicians, and many others. Over a year’s time, the Direct Project produced a set of protocols and specifications that creates a simple, scalable, standards-based way for participants to send authenticated, encrypted health information directly to known recipients over the Internet. Because Direct exchange uses technology that is open and well-tested, for example S/MIME over SMTP, it does not require implementers and users to deploy expensive new or proprietary software or hardware. And because Direct focuses entirely on the transport and security aspects of clinical messaging between participants, each of whom has his or her own unique Direct address, Direct is compatible with many different operating systems and applications such as EHRs and PHRs. Direct exchange is “universal” in the sense of being vendor- and application-neutral.
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October 03, 2011 | Tom Sullivan, Editor
Shortly after the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS) recommended that the United States adopt ICD-10, the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) assembled a session on the code scheme for its annual conference. The last-minute addition was so late, in fact, that the MGMA did not have time to include it on the printed agenda, and the only available time slot was 7 a.m.
Yet the room was overflowing with attendees.
“You couldn’t get in. The line was out the door,” said Robert Tennant, senior policy advisor for the MGMA. “They were terrified.”
That day, nearly a decade before the dreaded compliance deadline, marked the beginning of what would become ICD-10’s reign of fear. And today, with two years remaining before the Oct. 1, 2013 compliance date, the mandate stands to incite more consternation than in all previous years combined.
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23 September 2011 Fiona Barr
Healthcare IT supplier INPS has become the second GP system supplier to receive full roll-out approval for Release 2 of the Electronic Prescription Service.
NHS Connecting for Health has announced that it has granted approval for the EPS R2 functionality in INPS’s Vision system to be rolled-out following first of type testing.
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By kirsten stewart
The Salt Lake Tribune
First published 29 minutes ago
Health information managers are the Marines of health reform, sweating it out on the front lines of a high-tech push for smarter, lower-cost health care.
For a decade, privacy concerns, high up-front costs and a lack of data-sharing standards have waylaid their quest to deliver on the promise of electronic health records.
But the consensus Tuesday at the American Health Information Management Association’s (AHIMA) annual conference in Salt Lake City was that health IT’s time has come.
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Gienna Shaw, for HealthLeaders Media , October 3, 2011
You think eHealth is all about the apps and software? While it is true that the vast majority of eHealth tools featured at the Health 2.0 conference in San Francisco exist only online or in smartphones and devices, there were several devices folks can actually touch at the show.
Although most of the devices are aimed at consumer end-users, there are benefits to healthcare organizations. For example, devices that allow patients to share their data can help docs track patients after discharge, allowing them to intervene if a patient shows signs deterioration--possibly heading off a visit to the ER or a readmission.
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HDM Breaking News, September 30, 2011
The federal government's revamped HealthIT.gov Web site includes extensive information for patients on their rights under the HIPAA privacy, security and breach notification rules.
One page, for instance, walks through the process of accessing medical records from providers and explains patients' rights: "A provider cannot deny you a copy of your records because you have not paid for the services you have received. If you request an electronic copy of protected health information, a covered entity is required to provide you with such electronic copy to the extent it is readily producible.
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Posted: October 3, 2011 - 12:00 pm ET
The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology awarded APP Design, an Itasca, Ill.-based software developer, a contract worth more than $1.2 million to design, develop and pilot the electronic implementation of existing patient healthcare choice policies and improve healthcare provider business processes.
The contract was issued through the ONC's Office of the Chief Privacy Officer. Project goals include automating an informed consent process and ensuring "that individuals are knowledgeable participants in decisions about the sharing (of) their electronic health information in a clinical environment," according to a statement of work issued by HHS (PDF).
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22 September 2011 Shanna Crispin
Misguided regulatory regimes are making it difficult for the manufacturers of mobile medical apps to bring their products to market, an industry summit has been told.
The audience at the Mobile Healthcare Industry Summit 2011 in Brussels heard that there are now significant differences in the regulation of mobile medical software and applications in Europe and the United States.
In the US, the Food and Drug Administration is getting heavily involved in the regulation of mobile medical applications.
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There were plenty of ideas for products and services at the Mobile Healthcare Industry Summit 2011; but fewer ideas for getting them implemented. Shanna Crispin reports from Brussels.
3 October 2011
“Maybe you get sensors embedded into your body, and they link to a watch and let you know: ‘hey, it’s time to eat’. Well that could be nice.”
Christian Lindholm, chief innovation officer for Finnish digital service design company Fjord, had some popular - and some not so popular - ideas to put forward at the Mobile Healthcare Industry Summit 2011.
The conference was not short of like-minded people with big ideas; even devices already in existence and showcased at the event could appear somewhat futuristic.
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September 30, 2011 | Michelle McNickle, Web content producer
According to a Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) tally of data breaches since 2009, about 260 incidents occurred that went on to affect more than 10 million patients. And, it gets worse -- the second largest breach occurred not because of a hacked password but when computer back-up tapes were stolen from the back of a truck.
Security within the industry is changing, and health data breaches are a significant issue. According to Rick Kam, president and co-founder of ID Experts, now is a critical time in determining the future of health security.
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By Olga Kharif - Sep 30, 2011 8:00 AM ET
When Brian Froelke joined emergency responders in tornado-ravaged Joplin, Missouri, in May, the physician brought along a Toshiba Corp. (6502) smartphone with a hairbrush-size gadget attached.
The device, made by Redmond, Washington-based startup Mobisante Inc., converts a phone into a pocket ultrasound machine. Froelke used it to examine a pregnant woman who came to a temporary hospital complaining of stomach pain.
“It was helpful to reassure the mom that the baby didn’t have any obvious problems,” Froelke says.
Mobisante’s device, which goes on sale in October, is part of a wave of new smartphone applications and attachments in the nascent mobile health market, Bloomberg Businessweek reports in its Oct. 3 issue. In the past eight months, products that turn a phone into a blood-pressure monitoring cuff, a CT-scan viewer and other health-care gadgets have received U.S. Food and Drug Administration clearance.
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September 30, 2011 | Mike Miliard, Managing Editor
Fewer than half of physician practices have made the switch to EHRs – but that should change very soon
Hard to believe, but it's been more than two and a half years since the HITECH Act first laid the lucrative incentives on the table to stimulate physician uptake of electronic health record adoption.
So how's that been going so far? "I'd definitely characterize it as rapid adoption," says IDC Health Insights analyst Judy Hanover. "Providers have really taken the opportunities created under HITECH to heart. They've really seen this as a unique and limited opportunity to adopt EHRs, particularly in the ambulatory market."
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September 30, 2011 | Mary Mosquera
The last day that physicians and other eligible professionals can start their 90-day reporting period this year for the Medicare electronic health records (EHRs) incentive program is Oct. 3.
Providers must use their certified EHRs in a meaningful way for 90 consecutive days in order to attest and qualify to receive an incentive payment in 2011, according to the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
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Lack of training and funding for health professionals in small offices and health centres are hobbling EMR push, experts say.
10/3/2011 6:00:00 AM
by Nestor E. Arellano
Health information and technology experts say it will likely take another 20 years or more before the e-health dream is fully realized in the country.
“Canada Health Infoway has been at it for 10 years, but I don't think we'll see full e-records implementation in 50 years…well that's an exaggeration, its more likely 20 years,” said Gail Crook, CEO and registrar of the Canadian Health and Information Management Association (CHIMA). The CHIMA represents more than 3,700 health information management professionals employed in hospitals, community health centres, education systems and government offices across the country. Crook spoke during a debate on medical records security sponsored by document destruction company, Shred-it Canada.
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Monday, October 3, 2011
A primer on key terms in Business Impact this month.
By Simson L. Garfinkel
To bring some order to the fuzzy world of cloud computing, the U.S. government's National Institute of Standards and Technology has created a standard definition and a Cloud Computing Reference Architecture. Both are in the form of "Special Publications," which are not official U.S. government standards but are designed to provide guidance to specific communities of practitioners and researchers.
The NIST Definition of Cloud Computing, currently in draft form, is based on NIST-sponsored workshops and public comments. The single definition helps ensure that government workers, industry, and other groups are talking about the same thing when they use the same words.
The draft document defines cloud computing as "a model for enabling ubiquitous, convenient, on-demand network access to a shared pool of configurable computing resources (e.g., networks, servers, storage, applications, and services) that can be rapidly provisioned and released with minimal management effort or service provider interaction."
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Friday, September 30, 2011
All The News That's Fit to Print: New York Times Notices UK National Health IT Project Goes "PfffT"
At my Sept. 22, 2011 post "
NPfIT Programme goes PfffT" I wrote about the £12.7bn
National Programme for IT in the NHS (National Health Service) in the UK being ended after years of delays, technical difficulties, contractual disputes and rising costs. I had predicted this for years.
Now the New York Times has felt this to be News Fit to Print. The NYT may be alone in terms of US coverage of this situation by national newspapers:
September 27, 2011, 7:40 am
New York Times
By STEVE LOHR
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Enjoy!
David.