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."

Saturday, August 25, 2012

Weekly Overseas Health IT Links - 25th August, 2012.

Note: Each link is followed by a title and few paragraphs. 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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Medical errors continue to dog healthcare

By Madelyn Kearns, Contributing editor
Created 08/17/2012
MINNEAPOLIS – A new Wolters Kluwer Health Survey of 1,000 U.S. consumers revealed that nearly one third of Americans (30 percent) have experienced a medical mistake either firsthand or from a third-party. A majority (68 percent) believe that as the medical field continues to adopt new technologies, medical errors will decrease.
Seventy-three percent of respondents expressed concern about medical errors, with nearly half (45 percent) characterizing their distress as significant (“very”). Anxieties fluctuated based on age and sex, with older consumers aged 35-54 expressing more apprehension than younger contributors (76 percent vs. 66 percent), and women out-worrying men by eight percentage points (76 percent vs. 68 percent). No matter how it’s sliced, very few people are dismissing lapses made by physicians, medical personnel or other healthcare providers.
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Dashboards: Data Visualization for all Elements of the Business

AUG 17, 2012 12:04pm ET
It is time to stop thinking of dashboards as a “nice to have” and instead view the technology as a way to provide everyone in the company with a common version of the truth. Long-gone are the clunky spreadsheets and simple, static graphs; data visualization has evolved into a dynamic discipline that is opening up new doors for the exploration and analysis of complex data sets for a wide range of businesses. 
Knowledge is Power
Collection of information is required for every industry. For example, the number of patients seeing a doctor each day or how quickly a waste management company’s employees are picking up refuse are measures that can be tracked to determine how a business is running. Without this intelligence, it is impossible to know what is working, where weaknesses exist and what processes may need to change to ensure the health of the organization.
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Docs using EHRs often overlook signs of depression

August 17, 2012 | By Dan Bowman
Electronic health records are designed to improve access to patient health information and, in turn, quality of care. Researchers from the University of Florida, however, have discovered a correlation between primary care doctors who use EHRs and decreased depression treatment for patients who also suffered from multiple chronic conditions.
The findings, published this month in the Journal of General Internal Medicine, looked at data from the National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey between 2006 and 2008; overall, they reviewed 3,467 patient visits.
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Stairway to the cloud

By Philipp Gräzel von Grätz, HealthTechWire
Created 08/14/2012
Cloud-based clinical information systems are becoming increasingly attractive for clinicians, hospital administrations and CIOs. In radiology in particular, cloud-based RIS/PACS solutions can streamline processes and facilitate cooperative care scenarios within regions or even across borders without compromising privacy. A remaining challenge is to address the popular misconception that cloud-based healthcare IT is about transferring patient data to Google, Amazon, Apple and the like. The reality is that RIS/PACS vendors engage in highly protected private clouds to guarantee the highest security levels.
Healthcare systems in industrialized nations have been under pressure for several years now. No wonder that IT solutions that help to increase care efficiency are high on the agenda of many hospitals. But the IT revolution in healthcare is not only about technology; it is also about business models. Software as a service (SaaS) and infrastructure as a service (IaaS) have been marketed as potentially attractive alternatives to buying large-scale information systems like RIS, PACS or indeed HIS. Under the “cloud” label, the concept has gained considerable momentum in recent years.
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My Struggles With Our Electronic Health Records System

06 Monday Aug 2012
By Richard Just, MD
My group purchased our Electronic Health Records system (EHR) about 5 years ago.  We had 4 clinical practice locations (soon to be 5 ½) with 1 administration office.  None of these sites are close to each other.  A major reason for purchasing an EHR was, and still is, to collect and analyze all data from our entire practice for the purpose of determining outcomes of our treatments. In other words, we wanted to know how our patients were doing in all of our offices, which treatments were working and which were not, and then use this information to refine and practice the best medicine we could. This was the promise of EHR.
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EHR prompt nearly kills prison inmate

August 16, 2012 | By Dan Bowman
An inmate at a California correctional facility nearly received a lethal dose of heart medication last week at the prompting of a newly implemented electronic health record system. The system--from EHR vendor Epic--reportedly has caused multiple additional headaches for nurses since going live July 1, sparking a record number of complaints and a call for the system to "go away until it's fixed," the Contra Costa Times reported.
Contra Costa County officials had visions of seamless connectivity for the exchange of health records between the county's correctional facilities and Contra Costa Regional Medical Center, according to the newspaper. Instead, the $45 million system has been nothing but trouble, claim the nurses charged with its use. Jerry Fillingim, a labor representative for the nurses, told the Times that Epic was treating the county as its "guinea pig." 
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Medical Device Integration Software Surges In Hospitals

Spread of EHRs spurs demand for applications to connect device output to electronic records.
The rising tide of electronic health records (EHRs) in hospitals is lifting many other boats, ranging from clinical analytics apps to private health information exchanges. Another beneficiary is medical device integration (MDI) software, which connects medical device data output to EHRs.
According to a new Capsite survey, 44% of the nearly 300 responding hospitals said they had purchased an MDI application in recent years. The majority of those purchases were made in 2011 and 2012. AdTech Ad
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A Prescription for Health Care Information Certainty

AUG 16, 2012 10:11am ET
Information Management, a sister publication of Health Data Management, recently interviewed Philip Fasano, CIO and executive vice president at Kaiser Permanente:
Uncertainty has become the norm with health care information management, but few entities have handled and risen to the challenge like health plan and health care provider Kaiser Permanente. The not-for-profit carries an operating revenue of approximately $42 billion yearly and serves more than 8.8 million members. CIO and EVP Philip Fasano joined Kaiser Permanente in 2007 and has lead a team of 6,000 IT employees  through a handful of sweeping implementations in the last few years, including the establishment of HealthConnect, the largest civilian electronic health record repository. Fasano recently discussed some of the high-level approaches he said need to be in order before any IT implementation goes out for a bid, and what, if anything, health agencies can do to plan for requirements and pools of new patients from federal health care reform.
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Hacker Encrypts Physicians’ Server, Demands Payment

AUG 15, 2012 5:33pm ET
The Surgeons of Lake County, a group practice in Libertyville, Ill., recently announced a breach of protected information following an extortion attempt.
The practice discovered on June 25 that a hacker had taken control of a server hosting corporate email and electronic health records. A message on the server said its contents had been encrypted and demanded an undisclosed financial payment from the practice for a password to turn off the encryption. The practice turned off the server and it was not been turn back on, and notified authorities.
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Data integrity essential for HIEs, says AHIMA

By Diana Manos, Senior Editor
Created 08/16/2012
CHICAGO – Ensuring data quality is not a trivial task, say the authors of a new paper on health information exchange and data quality from the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA). Ideally, the health data in an electronic record should be accurate, up-to-date and complete, "but unfortunately the real world is far from ideal."
"High-quality data requires a very clear understanding of the meaning, context, and intent of the data – unambiguous and, ideally, standardized computable definitions of data that can form the basis for future safe decision making," accordin to AHIMA HIE practice council members who contributed to the white paper: Linda Bailey-Woods, Teresa M. Hall, Aviva Halpert, Steven Kotyk, Shirley Neal Letha Stewart and Susan O. Torzewski.
The new paper, “Ensuring Data Integrity in Health Information Exchange,” is part of AHIMA’s Thought Leadership Series.
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Future of data analytics is predictive, actionable

August 16, 2012 | By Gienna Shaw
Move over, retrospective data analysis--the future is in real-time and predictive analytics, says a new market report from Frost & Sullivan. The trend is also toward web-based systems that aggregate disparate data across diverse care settings.
The more "holistic" approach to data mining includes clinical data from electronic health records combined with financial and administrative information to provide a more well-rounded view of the quality and efficiency of patient care--and then using that information to make strategic decisions, according to a Frost & Sullivan announcement.
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Five signs the medical apps industry is maturing

August 13, 2012 8:02 am by Dr. David Scher  
There are now over 13,000 health, fitness, and medical apps available. In a previous post I discussed ’Five creative and necessary ways of getting medical apps adopted.’ Specifically they were incorporating medical apps in informatics, utilization in schools for health education, government initiatives regarding digital technologies, medical apps in EHR clinical decision support tools, and patient portals. These however do not necessarily lead to adoption of these apps. Some of these are years away. But the industry is rapidly maturing and here are some ways in which it has or heading towards.
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Some Americans take to the idea of robot healthcare

By Diana Manos, Senior Editor
Created 08/15/2012
GLOUCESTER, UK – About one third of Americans are willing to receive some of their healthcare from robots, and 98 percent said they would receive robot care if it meant lower co-pays and health insurance costs.
A survey by www.CouponCodes4u.com of 1,723 Americans, aged 18-30, found 34 percent said that they would opt for care from a remote presence virtual and independent telemedicine assistant robot (RP-VITA), if given the choice, while 5 percent of respondents claimed to be “indifferent.”
Those surveyed were asked how regularly they visited their doctor: 52 percent said they saw a doctor regularly; 37 percent said they saw their doctor ‘every now and again;’ and one in 10, 11 percent of respondents said they visited their doctor, “hardly ever or not at all.”
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CSC reaches Lorenzo "milestone"

9 August 2012   Chris Thorne
The Department of Health appears to have signed off the deployment verification criteria for three of the early adopters of Lorenzo in the North, Midlands and East.
In a call with investors to discuss CSC’s 2013 Q1 results, Michael Lawrie, the company’s president and chief executive, said the company had made “good progress” with the electronic patient record system, and “achieved a key milestone” with the software.
He said the company had “delivered this new software to three trusts in the United Kingdom and that as a result of achieving this milestone the NHS has agreed to pay us for that milestone.”
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New NME Lorenzo trusts poised to commit

16 August 2012   Chris Thorne
A new deal between Department of Health and CSC for the North, Midlands and East is looking increasingly likely, with a number of trusts poised to sign-up to take  CSC's Lorenzo system.
At least one trust, Walsall Healthcare NHS Foundation Trust, has already committed to take the electronic patient system through the NPfIT contract.  Others appear to be on the verge of committing, should a new national deal be signed.
The current ‘standstill’ agreement between CSC and the DH is due to end on 31 August.
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Online weight management effective, but not as much as in-person care

August 15, 2012 | By Dan Bowman
Online programs geared toward weight management are helpful for patients who have little to no contact with physicians, but aren't as effective as face-to-face visits, according to new research.
The study was a retrospective look at 18 different studies--14 weight loss studies with more than 2,500 participants and four more on weight maintenance that included more than 1,600 participants. After the six-month mark in both sets of studies, weight loss and regain results proved more positive for those receiving computer-based interventions when compared with those receiving minimal interventions (pamphlets, for instance).
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New Medical Devices Get Smart

Flu Scanner, Adjustable Prosthesis Could Help Patients Do It Themselves

By SARAH E. NEEDLEMAN

John Redfield is testing a prosthesis that he can adjust using an app on his smartphone, instead of a wrench at a doctor's office.
For amputees like John Redfield, shopping for a new pair of shoes used to be a major hassle. Walking up or down an incline was as awkward as wearing ski boots. And going shoeless required performing a constant balancing act.
Adjustable prostheses and other high-tech devices may benefit patients who have a tendency to ignore or delay care but there are some risks. Sarah Needleman reports on digits. Photo: Mathew Healey.
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Study: Proximity to IT companies affects EMR costs

Posted: August 14, 2012 - 2:45 pm ET
The adoption of electronic medical records was likely to provide savings for urban hospitals after three years of their use, while rural hospitals faced increased costs for at least six years, a study found.
Hospitals' proximity to information technology companies and their experience with health IT upgrades were among the biggest determinants of whether the addition of EMRs would lower or increase costs, according to an analysis for the National Bureau of Economic Research.
The researchers examined records for hospitals that adopted EMRs from 1996-2009 and found hospitals in “IT-intensive markets” experienced a 3.4% decrease in costs three years after adopting a basic EMR and a 2.2% cost decrease three years after adopting an advanced EMR. However, hospitals in areas with the least amount of IT firms had up to a 4% increase in costs even six years after adoption of EMRs.
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Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Data and Analytics Key to Health Reform, but Challenges Stand in Way

NATIONAL HARBOR, Md. -- At the eHealth Initiative's National Forum on Data and Analytics in Healthcare last week, stakeholders discussed the importance of data and analytics in implementing health reform, as well as the challenges associated with it.
Jennifer Covich Bordenick, CEO of the eHealth Initiative, said, "Our survey, CIOs and members kept telling us that they are concerned about analytics. They don't feel they have the tools necessary to meet the demands of accountable care and meaningful use." She noted that "93% of the CIOs believe it is very important, but 72% don't feel their organizations have what they need to meet the analytical needs."
By convening experts in health data and analytics, the forum aimed to highlight organizations that are leading the way and facilitate conversations around the need for improvement, she said.
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Taking the Risk Out of Big IT

AUG 14, 2012 11:45am ET
For insurance companies, moving to a new policy administration or claims processing system is usually a major forklift operation that requires a huge investment of time, money and human resources--no matter how smooth the eventual cutover may be. Such is the nature of the IT beast, which has reached a scale of enormous complexity and inter-dependency between systems.
However, in recent years, there has been momentum for doing things a little easier--of breaking down IT task and migrations into more manageable “chunks”--to be done iteratively, in concert with the business. IT, with its big systems, big networks and now big data, is an ideal candidate for this strategy. The big question, of course, is: is it realistic? Yes, says Brad Power, writing in Harvard Business Review, advocating chunking as the best way to manage ever-expanding and ever-complex IT projects.
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Public health and HIE: Web services integration

By Noam Arzt, PhD, FHIMSS
While the Direct protocol is coming to increasing use for submission of data from providers to public health, a more sophisticated technology – web services – is becoming popular as well.
Even though Stage 1 Meaningful Use (MU) only requires uni-directional interfaces to public health, some programs (especially Immunization Information Systems, or IIS) anticipate that bi-directional interoperability will soon be the norm (and may be incorporated into Stage 3 MU). Using web-services, XML-based system-to-system transactions can be constructed relatively easily.
But public health systems have historically interacted directly with provider systems. What role can and should an HIE have in these interactions?
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Ryba's 16 rules of effective HIE

By Joel Ryba, COO, HIXNY
As a fan of the relational database, and the inventor of the relational model, the late Ted (Edgar F.) Codd, I have drafted a brief set of rules that I believe an HIE must comply with to be completely effective.
These rules are not for any particular type of exchange. Whether you implement stone carvers with chisels, paper and fax, peer-to-peer electronic exchange, federated repository, or a centralized repository; HIE quite simply must support these tenets to be effective.
When Dr. Codd introduced his rules for relational database management systems in 1985, it was in response to the market starting to introduce products that they said were RDBMS but actually were not. So in order to protect the relational model, which he introduced in 1970, Codd threw down the gauntlet, defining what a real RDBMS should be. And his rules stuck.
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FCC: Rural health pilot program saves money, boosts quality

Posted: August 13, 2012 - 5:45 pm ET
Federal officials say a $415 million information technology program approved six years ago to build broadband networks among rural healthcare providers is successful in reducing costs and enhancing healthcare quality.
The FCC created its Rural Health Care Pilot Program in 2006 to provide an infrastructure for letting rural healthcare providers build networks connecting them to their urban counterparts. The initiative includes programs at 50 sites across 38 states. In many rural and underserved areas, the program brought broadband connectivity to those regions. The findings from the pilot program will be useful as the FCC develops a permanent program, the agency said in a 98-page report released Monday (PDF). As of January, $368 million of the $415 million available has been requested.
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Studies: Students don't get enough EHR access

Posted: August 13, 2012 - 1:00 pm ET
Researchers studying electronic health records say not enough medical schools give students permission to access EHRs.
Based on their results, the Alliance for Clinical Education concludes that medical students need more training. They found that 64% of medical-school programs allow students access, and about two-thirds of those students are allowed to write notes within the record. The results were reported in two studies that appeared in last month's edition of “Teaching and Learning in Medicine.”
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Cloud Outage Highlights Pitfalls as Well as Promise

Scott Mace, for HealthLeaders Media , August 14, 2012

The question isn't should you use cloud computing. The question is how.
First tip: Don't go all in without some sort of disaster recovery plan. Disasters do happen in the cloud. Earlier this month, dozens of hospitals temporarily lost access to patient records due to a cloud outage.
They should have asked the tougher questions earlier of their cloud service providers. In this case, it was Cerner Corporation, which attributed the outage to human error. The outage affected Adventist Health, which reverted to using paper-based records during the five-hour interruption in service.
Having just written a story about the cloud for HealthLeaders magazine, I was startled by just how many hospitals appear to have entrusted their EHRs to someone else's data center. Dell Healthcare recently told me it hosts more than 500 hospitals' EHRs in its cloud. Many Cerner customers run their own data centers, but an increasing number do not, leaving the hosting to Cerner.
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Medical Records Program Expected to Save Lives

IEEE Humanitarian Technology Challenge helps build pilot system in India

By KATHY PRETZ 13 August 2012
India’s health-care system is in dire straights, perhaps worst of all in the country’s countless “informal settlements,” or slums. Health centers are the cornerstone of health care in India’s rural areas, where most of the country’s 1.2 billion people reside. For the most part, modern technology is little known in the centers, with each covering a population of 100 000 spread over about 100 villages.   
That is where the IEEE Humanitarian Technology Challenge hopes to make its mark. In a pilot program, it has introduced a central database in two clinics, fed by information from RFID tracking cards that identify each patient and handheld devices through which a patient’s medical history and ailments are filed and accessed. It’s a giant step up, for the clinics often have limited patient records or sometimes none at all. Those that do keep records might use paper notebooks, but there is no filing system. And notebooks can be misplaced, memories fade, and mistakes happen.
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Allscripts Pushes “Open Architecture”

AUG 13, 2012 12:30pm ET
Allscripts has been trumpeting its “open architecture” philosophy for some time now, and Health Data Management recently talked with CEO Glen Tullman and Cliff Meltzer, executive vice president of solutions development, about what that really means.
“Open architecture is almost a philosophy,” Tullman says. The company, he notes, is not so arrogant as to believe it will figure out every aspect of the integration puzzle, but will work with other major players to interoperate with their systems, he adds. If an organization has a great financial system and is buying a clinical system from Allscripts, “We don’t say ‘rip it out,’ we’ll work with it,” he adds. “Being open is a state of mind.”
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Telehealth and Allscripts EHR, new dynamic duo

By Erin McCann, Associate Editor
Created 08/15/2012
CHICAGO – A burgeoning number of electronic health record systems are now being integrated with telehealth technology, purporting to make healthcare easily accessible to patients from virtually any location. 
Allscripts announced Wednesday it would jump on the integration bandwagon, as the company unveiled plans for a new telehealth solution, that officials say would expand access to care and enable providers to save time and money. 
The solution will integrate the American Well Online Care telehealth platform into the Allscripts Electronic Health Records (EHR) platform.
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Patient-controlled image-sharing network could better protect privacy

August 13, 2012 | By Julie Bird
A new scientific study validates the workability of a digital medical-imaging sharing system controlled by patients, not providers.
The study looked at an open-source prototype of the Patient Controlled Access-key REgistry (PCARE), according to an abstract published online Aug. 11 by the Journal of the American Medical Informatics Association.
The authors note that the current image-sharing method of patients hand-carrying CDs puts a burden on patients, while digital sharing networks coordinated by medical organizations challenge patient privacy. The PCARE prototype includes a central patient portal allowing patients to manage the access keys.
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Hospital IT security shouldn't be a knee-jerk reaction

August 13, 2012 | By Dan Bowman
Hospital operations, including patients' personal and health records, are becoming more digital by the day. As that landscape shifts online, an emphasis on keeping such information safe grows increasingly important.
Being reactionary, however, isn't enough in today's world. Just ask Phoenix Cardiac Surgery, a five-physician practice which earlier this year was fined $100,000 U.S. Department of Health & Human Services' Office for Civil Rights after a calendar of patient appointments was posted online.
HIPAA violations are an expensive proposition both for hospitals and patients--the former can face fines up to $1.5 million from OCR in addition to reputational hits, while the latter can face loss of identity, ruined credit and more.
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ONC aims to put Blue Button on automatic

By Mary Mosquera, Contributing Editor
Created 08/10/2012
WASHINGTON – The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT wants to automate for all patients the Blue Button feature that is currently available to veterans, military service members and Medicare beneficiaries to obtain their health information.
The Blue Button enables patients to view and download their information in simple text format. ONC is working with the Veterans Affairs Department, which first established Blue Button two years ago for its personal health record, MyHealtheVet, according to Lygeia Ricciardi, acting director of ONC’s Office of Consumer eHealth.
But first, standards and technical descriptions for the tool must be identified. So ONC’s Standards & Interoperability Framework will kick off this project Aug. 15 with a webinar to get participants involved in a wiki community.
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Monday, August 13, 2012

The Seven Habits of Highly Effective Health Care CIOs

Dr. Stephen Covey recently passed away. The self-help and management guru was 79 years old. It has been years since I saw him present his "Seven Habits of Highly Effective People," but I clearly recall his charisma, sincerity and wisdom. Over the intervening years, I occasionally have reread and benefited from his simple but profound insights. The best advice, I have found, is simple: If all of us did the simple things we already know, it would change the world. My Advisory Board Company colleagues -- former CIOs themselves -- and I have attempted to relate Covey's seven habits to the work life of health care CIOs. CIOs have difficult, complicated and stressful jobs. Who could benefit more from a little simplicity?
We are going to list each of the seven habits, as Covey defined them, and then identify ways that CIOs can apply these habits, based on input from leaders in the field.
Habit 1: Be Proactive -- Take initiative in life by realizing that your decisions are the primary determining factor for effectiveness in your life.
Right or wrong, a CIO in most hospitals today has to earn his or her place at the executive table. A passive CIO is headed for trouble, quickly -- few organizations will define your role strategically or arrange effective IT governance for you -- you must continually take the initiative and take responsibility for your results. A CIO who only does what his or her users ask is not going to earn that seat at the table. Assess your organization from the CEO's perspective: look at what makes the organization work, do your own SWOT -- strengths, weaknesses, opportunities, threats -- analysis and determine how you, as a leader, can help. Use this information to avoid becoming just an "order taker" by initiating brainstorming and "what-if" exercises with your users. Ingrain proactive service into your department -- make it a priority to identify problems before the users do and encourage staff to suggest uses of technology to their users instead of waiting for requests and fending them off.
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Enjoy!
David.

Friday, August 24, 2012

I Wonder How Well We Will Do With This With The NEHRS. It Is Not Easy.

This interesting article appeared a short while ago.

Data integrity essential for HIEs, says AHIMA

By Diana Manos, Senior Editor
Created 08/16/2012
CHICAGO – Ensuring data quality is not a trivial task, say the authors of a new paper on health information exchange and data quality from the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA). Ideally, the health data in an electronic record should be accurate, up-to-date and complete, "but unfortunately the real world is far from ideal."
"High-quality data requires a very clear understanding of the meaning, context, and intent of the data – unambiguous and, ideally, standardized computable definitions of data that can form the basis for future safe decision making," accordin to AHIMA HIE practice council members who contributed to the white paper: Linda Bailey-Woods, Teresa M. Hall, Aviva Halpert, Steven Kotyk, Shirley Neal Letha Stewart and Susan O. Torzewski.
The new paper, “Ensuring Data Integrity in Health Information Exchange,” is part of AHIMA’s Thought Leadership Series.
The paper’s authors say the ultimate goal of any HIE should be accurate identification of the patient. HIE patient identity is normally based on three things: the patient identifier as a cross-reference profile that matches patients by cross-referencing IDs; the patient demographics query profile, which queries a central patient information server; and patient administration management, knowing where the patient is, was, or is going.  
In addition the HIE should assign a unique patient/person identifier by using advanced record matching techniques – for example, probabilistic algorithms and manual processes – as needed, according to Bailey-Woods and her colleagues.
Nine influences have been identified as industry standards: system interfaces, algorithms, unique identifiers, business processes, data accuracy, data quality, training and medical devices. Very high MPI duplication rates have been identified in all arenas. Meeting industry standards regarding data quality could therefore produce tremendous benefits both in terms of monetary savings and quality of care, say the authors.
"Quality information is essential to all aspects of today's healthcare system, so improving the quality of data, information, and knowledge is paramount as we transition from paper to EHRs," they write. "Many errors and adverse incidents in healthcare occur as a result of poor data and information. In addition to threatening patient safety, poor data quality increases healthcare costs and inhibits health information exchange, research, and performance measurement initiatives."
More here:
The paper is well worth a close read by all those who are interested in seeing the NEHRS actually deliver on even the most limited of promises. Remember the NEHRS is a tweaked HIE at heart!
The bottom line is that creating a trustworthy and useful system is not as easy as it might seem.
David.

Thursday, August 23, 2012

It Seems There Is More Activity On Patient Safety From The Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care.

There was a newsletter released a day or so ago. On page 4 we read.

e-health update

Ensuring clinical safety remains a key objective for the operation of the Personally Controlled Electronic Health Record (PCEHR) system.

The Commission, working with NeHTA, has established an independent clinical governance group which aims to provide assurance to health care consumers, providers and the system operator that the PCEHR is a safe and efficient system.

Additionally, the Commission will establish a clinical safety audit program under the guidance of clinical governance group.

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I wonder who is on the group or is this another sop to political correctness. Look forward to some clarity on all this.

This seems to be a link:

http://www.safetyandquality.gov.au/publications-resources/newsletters/update-newsletter/

Here are the contact details:

Australian Commission on Safety and Quality in Health Care


Tel (02) 9126 3600 Fax (02) 9126 3613

Level 7, 1 Oxford Street,

Darlinghurst NSW 2010

GPO Box 5480 Sydney NSW 2001

Can I suggest that if you have a view on having a Board for the Commission (and group) with no apparent specialist e-Health expertise undertaking this role you may want to e-mail them or give them a call to encourage a better job than we have seen from NEHTA (with all the secret and useless documents) to date.
I wonder will we see some more useful stuff from these people? We wait and watch.

Here is the link to what the web site says about e-health safety. Not much to re-assure I can see:

http://www.safetyandquality.gov.au/our-work/safety-in-e-health/
 
David.

This Is Really A Pretty Important Survey Of GPs. Sad It Has Been Kept Secret Until Now.

The following appeared a few days ago.

Government report backs PCEHR incentives

17 August, 2012 Michael Woodhead
A government report on GPs’ readiness to adopt the PCEHR has backed the profession’s concerns about an increased workload and the need for reimbursement to cover the time spent preparing and explaining the new records.
The results of a 2011 survey of more than 800 GPs show that while most are broadly supportive of the PCEHR concept, there are uncertainties about the details and concerns about the quality and workability of the system
One of the main concerns was with the time required to implement the new system, with  73% of GPs believing  it will take at least 15 mins to explain the PCEHR to patients and 52% believe it will take at least 15 minutes to set one up.
The report therefore concludes that “reimbursement for the time taken to use the new national system is a relevant strategy ... to encourage adoption.”
The report found that only a third of GPs thought that e-health applications easy to use and a third were not early adopters but preferred to wait for systems to be proven before adopting.
It seems clear from the 90 page report that the attitudes to the planned NEHRS as mixed with the level of concern being a little stronger among older GPs and actual practice owners.
Note: This report was developed late last year as part of the work undertaken by National Change And Adoption Program for the NEHRS / PCEHR. This program was led by McKinsey.
My reading of the survey suggests - as I have often said previously - is a drop in efficiency that leads to care being slowed down and the associated cost in terms of earning capacity.
It was interesting to read that GPs were not convinced that anything much had been done to reduce ‘red tape’ and that there was a fear the NEHRS would add more to already time-poor clinicans.
The need for payment to compensate for time spent seems pretty clear if adoption is to happen. I certainly doubt the stick will work very well. A real carrot is needed.
It is also interesting that many were concerned about the quality and completeness of information and issues around technical operations of the system.
This paragraph in the report was pointed out to me by a correspondent and seems to somehow devalue the work done by carefully choosing what was researched. Certainly avoided all the tricky bits!
“Note, however, that basic infrastructural readiness was assessed in terms of having access to a computer and an internet connection. GPs generally do not as yet have in place applications that help them share information between providers and/or consumers, of the required foundational components for the national eHealth record system, e.g. NASH (National Authentication Service for Health), SMD (Secure Message Delivery), and HPI-Os (healthcare Provider Identifier for Organisations). This survey did not specifically address these specific foundational elements, nor issues such as the quality of data that exists within existing eHealth applications.”
Go here to download the report. It is still well worth a read.
David.

Late news: I note today we now seem to have payments to GPs well and truly back on the agenda with some announcements from the Health Minister. Seems they have caved and recognised the PCEHR is a time imposition. Smart are they not?

 

Wednesday, August 22, 2012

It Seems That The NEHRS System Infrastructure Is Now All Complete And Operational. Wow!

The following appeared today:

PCEHR infrastructure finished

The national infrastructure for the PCEHR has been completed, with the final components allowing doctors to upload and view ehealth records.

Other pieces completed include the healthcare provider portal, and healthcare provider PCEHR registration.
More here:

You can - if you have the a NASH Credential (well actually any DoHA issued credential will work as NASH is still a few years away) log in and then access the records of patients who have said you can. (Of course how they have told you that is a bit hard to fathom just yet!)

For those lucky souls here is the URL:

I am just speechless with excitement and look forward to comments from a few lucky provider souls who can tell it how well it all works!

Among the other things apparently claimed are that:

“The components that will allow GP software to upload and view eHealth records has also been implemented.”

This seems all a little premature and untested at this point - to say the least! Anyway there is very little to look at if you do get to log in!

One really has to wonder just what is actually going on.

On that theme the NEHRS has always known me as DAVID MORE DOB XX/XX/1949.

When I popped on today suddenly I am DAVID G MORE (same details).

I was able to check back as I had a screen capture from the 7th of August that has the old name!

Also it seems the Audit Trail does not get retained or can't be displayed beyond about 20 entries - or the name change has done something - and earlier records are lost. The IHI is the same and all the data seems to be present.

So finished infrastructure that really isn’t and certainly has not been fully tested, names changing for no reason - It just gets better and better.

David.