Here are a few
I came across last week.
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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https://www.digitalhealth.net/2021/11/what-does-the-merger-of-nhs-digital-and-nhsx-with-nhs-england-mean/
What does the merger of NHS Digital and NHSX with NHS England mean?
Following
the announcement that NHS Digital and NHSX is to merge with NHS England and
Improvement, Digital Health’s editor-in-chief, Jon Hoeksma, explores what the
consequences will be for the NHS IT community.
John Hoeksma –
25 Nov, 2021
NHS Digital
and NHSX staff deserve a lot of sympathy this week. Having worked tirelessly
throughout the pandemic, their reward is to be told the axe is to fall on their
organisations, with many facing uncertainty surrounding their jobs.
News of the
axing of NHS Digital (6000 staff) and NHSX (around 900 staff and contractors),
was sudden and was delivered via a staff announcement from NHS England and
Improvement CEO, Amanda Pritchard.
While a
rationalisation of the many duplicate roles and responsibilities was widely
expected, the full-blown take-over of NHS Digital caught many by surprise.
By making NHS
Digital its in-house tech team, NHS England and Improvement will almost doubles
its 6,500 staff overnight, in the short-term at least. There is a strong
suspicion that the sheer size of NHS England and Improvement could lead to more
job cuts.
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https://www.digitalhealth.net/2021/11/long-awaited-wade-gery-review-into-nhs-it-organisations-is-published/
Long-awaited Wade-Gery review into NHS IT organisations is published
The review
of NHS IT organisations by Laura Wade-Gery has finally been published, and as
exclusively revealed by Digital Health News, recommends the axing of NHS
Digital and NHSX.
John Hoeksma –
24 Nov, 2021
Instead, the review says that NHS England and Improvement must take
over responsibility for digital and data within the wider transformation agenda
and embed it at all levels. The decision to implement the core recommendation
was announced by NHS England and Improvement CEO, Amanda Pritchard, to staff on November 22.
The review
states that despite much good work, digital transformation is currently
fragmented across the system, split between different agencies and is “often
overshadowed by requirements of the day-to-day”.
It continues:
“Many senior leaders see digital as a separate not embedded enabler and there
needs to be greater clarity on the roles of national, regional and local in
driving transformation.”
The review
goes on to state there is “variable commitment, experience and interest amongst
senior leaders in digitally enabled system transformation, with too few
integrative leaders able to effectively bridge managerial, clinical and
digital”.
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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/asia/roundup-medanta-adopts-qureais-x-ray-software-india-open-medical-cobotics-centre-and-more
Roundup: Medanta adopts Qure.ai's x-ray software, India to open a medical
cobotics centre, and more briefs
Also, Philips
Foundation is funding a cardiac rehab centre in Singapore.
By Adam Ang
November 26,
2021 02:34 AM
Medanta
taps Qure.ai for AI-driven chest x-ray analysis
Medanta, a
multi-speciality medical group in India, has partnered with Qure.ai to
implement the latter's artificial intelligence software to enhance chest x-ray
analysis.
The hospital group
will be adopting the qXR software which automatically analyses chest x-rays and
spots findings for better diagnosis and treatment. The AI tool can detect 30
abnormalities of the lungs, pleura, heart, bones and diaphragm.
"Medanta strives
to deliver world-class healthcare through its high-end medical equipment and
superior infrastructure. State-of-the-art technology is an essential aspect of
healthcare delivery," Dr Naresh Trehan, chairman and managing director of
Medanta, was quoted as saying in a news report.
The Qure.ai software
has also been adopted by Fujifilm Corporation for its portable X-ray FDR
Xair system. Through its recent partnership with AstraZeneca Malaysia, the
startup has brought its x-ray software to some primary care clinics in Malaysia
to support the early detection of lung cancer there.
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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/emea/french-researchers-reveal-chatbot-skills-override-vaccine-hesitancy
French researchers reveal chatbot skills to override vaccine hesitancy
Interactive
technology could help solve the problem of low vaccination rates in Europe.
By Anna Engberg
November 25,
2021 10:08 AM
A
team of French cognitive scientists has addressed the urgent issue of vaccine
hesitancy within many EU countries and proposes a new approach. With a study
published in October this year, the researchers successfully demonstrated that
the reluctance to be vaccinated could be decreased by deploying chatbot
technology.
WHY IT
MATTERS
The
chatbot study involved researchers from the Centre National
de la Recherche Scientifique (CNRS), the French National Institute of Health
and Medical Research INSERM and ENS-PSL.
The
study, published in the Journal of Experimental Psychology: Applied,
found that interaction with a chatbot developed by CNRS, ENS-PSL and INSERM was
able to reduce vaccination refusal by 20 per cent within a test group of 338
participants.
In
the control group, which received only brief information about the COVID-19
vaccination, there were no comparable results in terms of general views and
willingness to vaccinate.
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https://ehrintelligence.com/news/amazon-health-it-partnership-aims-to-enhance-clinical-communication
Amazon Health IT Partnership Aims to Enhance Clinical Communication
Amazon has
partnered with a health IT company to create an ambient clinical intelligence
tool that is set to streamline clinical communication.
By Hannah Nelson
November 24,
2021 - Health IT vendor Vocera has announced
a collaboration with Amazon to build an ambient clinical intelligence
solution in efforts to enhance the patient experience and streamline clinical
communication.
The
HIPAA-eligible solution will leverage a set of technologies from Alexa Smart
Properties to allow patients and families to receive information about their
stay through simple voice requests spoken to an Amazon Echo in the patient’s
room.
The health IT
will automatically answer common questions from patients that do not need
clinical intervention, like visitor hours.
For requests
that require clinical intervention, the tool will recognize keywords and
phrases to route the message to the appropriate care team member. This is
expected to streamline clinical communication by reducing unnecessary care team
interruptions.
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https://patientengagementhit.com/news/patient-generated-clinical-notes-opennotes-yield-patient-satisfaction
Patient-Generated Clinical Notes, OpenNotes Yield Patient Satisfaction
Most
patients and providers agreed patient-generated clinical notes via OpenNotes
was a positive for appointments.
By Sara Heath
November 24,
2021 - Patient-generated health data and appointment agenda-setting via
OpenNotes—a process that OpenNotes had dubbed OurNotes—can lead to both
clinician and patient satisfaction, as well as increased patient engagement
during clinical visits, the organization reported in a recent Journal of
Medical Internet Research report.
These
findings build on the literature confirming OpenNotes, or the practice of
patients having free access to their clinical notes, as improving patient
engagement and satisfaction. Starting in April of 2021, healthcare
organizations have been beholden
to providing open clinical notes as part of the 21st Century Cures Act and ONC
information blocking final rule.
OurNotes is a
little different, foremost because it is not a regulatory requirement. The
practice allows patients to contribute some of their own medical information to
their health records to be integrated with clinician notes.
The JMIR study
looked at OurNotes efficacy at four academic medical centers, particularly
testing the system for eliciting patient recollections of their previous
medical encounter and three
priority points for their upcoming medical encounter
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https://www.medpagetoday.com/opinion/second-opinions/95788
Medicine Has Become the Great Patient Handoff
— Patients pay the price for our fragmented healthcare system
by Kathleen
A. Hallinan, MD, MPH November 21, 2021
Americans
have become the commodity in their own healthcare system. A patient has gone
from being a person who has a relationship with a physician to a sheep that is
herded through, with the corporate medical world making money off them with
every move. Gone are the days when a physician would do rounds in the hospital
in the morning, see patients in the office, follow them into the nursing home,
and do home visits as they came to the end of their journey.
"Care"
has now become a fragmented web of hospitalists, intensivists, and mid-level
care that only remotely reflects the relationships that were the bedrock of the
American medical system just 20 years ago.
What
is the most substantial impact of this fragmented care? No one provider is the
sole caregiver with total responsibility. Medicine has become the great
handoff, with no one seeing the whole picture of the person in front of them.
Patients have become a conglomeration of body systems and body parts to be
fixed or addressed in a fragmented fashion, reminiscent of an assembly line.
Pretend
for a moment you're a patient and you go to the emergency room for an acute
issue. There, staff need only to verify that you will not expire within 24
hours, and out you go. If the risk is too high, then they hand you off to the
hospitalist who will admit you, but if your condition worsens, there is often
another handoff to an intensivist who manages the ICU. If more than one or two
organ systems are affected then subspecialists will come and pore over the
computer (rarely over the human) to see if the numbers in the electronic
medical record are within their wheelhouse.
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https://www.mdlinx.com/physiciansense/what-can-be-done-to-fix-ehrs/
What can be done to fix EHRs?
By Lara
Becker on November 23, 2021
EHRs
can make or break a physician’s efficiency, as well as their longevity in
medical practice. The proof is in the research. For example, a 2020 Journal
of Medical Internet Research study found that 74.5% of queried physicians said EHRs
contributed to their burnout.
It
was never supposed to be this way.
In
2009, President Barack Obama delivered a speech at an AMA conference saying EHRs “will not only mean
less paper-pushing and lower administrative costs, saving taxpayers billions of
dollars; it will also mean all of you physicians will have an easier time doing
your jobs.”
Research
demonstrates that EHRs have improved certain aspects of medical practice,
however. For example, a 2012 CDC survey found
that 88% of doctors thought EHRs produced clinical benefits for practice, and
75% felt that EHRs allowed a physician to deliver better patient care. Along
these perceived benefits, however, comes the clerical burden of EHR data entry,
which takes an undeniable toll on doctors.
What
would solve the problem? PhysicianSense consulted several experts on the
subject. The answer, it seems, must incorporate physician input, user
experience (UX) design, and healthcare policymakers.
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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/emea/race-equality-foundation-says-uk-review-medical-device-bias-not-enough
Race Equality Foundation says UK review into medical device bias is not
enough
Government
review will examine the impact of devices such as oximeters on patients from
different ethnic groups.
By Tammy Lovell
November 24,
2021 02:23 AM
The
UK government has launched a “far-reaching review” into the impact of potential
bias in the design and use of medical devices.
Race
Equality Foundation CEO Jabeer Butt welcomed the review, but said it was not
enough to explain the disproportionate deaths of Black, Asian and minority
ethnic (BAME) people from COVID-19.
The
review will examine medical devices currently on the market to identify where
systematic bias and risk exist and make recommendations on how these issues
should be tackled in the creation of medical devices from design to use.
It
will also consider the enhanced risk of bias in the emerging range of
algorithmic based data / artificial intelligence (AI) tools.
Medical
devices such as oximeters will be examined to identify potential discrepancies
in how they work for different ethnic groups and whether regulations mean there
is a systemic bias inherent in medical devices.
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https://www.healthcareittoday.com/2021/11/24/randomized-controlled-trial-shows-rpm-improves-patient-outcomes/
Randomized Controlled Trial Shows RPM Improves Patient Outcomes
November 24, 2021
Colin Hung
A
randomized controlled trial across 8 acute care hospitals showed patients that
were part of a Remote Patient Monitoring (RPM) program after surgery, were 5.3%
less likely to be readmitted, 13.9% less likely to report pain 7 days after
surgery, and 24.2% safer because medication errors were detected early on.
Background
The
trial was conducted by Dr. Michael McGillion and Dr. PJ
Devereaux of the Population
Health Research Institute and McMaster University. They recently published
their results in the British Medical Journal – “Post-discharge
after surgery Virtual Care with Remote Automated Monitoring-1 (PVC-RAM-1)
technology versus standard care: randomised controlled trial.”
The
objective of the study was to determine if virtual care, coupled with RPM had
an impact on the outcomes of and reduced readmissions for patients discharged
after non-elective surgeries versus standard care (no virtual care, no RPM).
The study involved 905 adult patients across 8 acute care hospitals.
Participants
in the experimental group received a tablet computer and RPM technology
(provided by Cloud DX) that measured
blood pressure, heart rate, respiratory rate, oxygen saturation, temperature,
and body weight. For 30 days participants took daily biophysical measurements
and photographs of their wound three times a day. This information was
transmitted to the care team back at the hospital.
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https://www.healthleadersmedia.com/technology/data-cleanup-keeps-idaho-health-information-exchange-alive
Data Cleanup Keeps Idaho Health Information Exchange Alive
Analysis
| By Scott Mace |
November 24, 2021
New
management targets social determinants of health integration.
KEY TAKEAWAYS
·
Data cleanup saved HIE from insolvency and
continues to play a role in its goal of break-even operations by the end of
2022.
·
First-in-nation statewide license of
Findhelp.org expands HIE's role in integrating social determinants of health
with data integration goals.
·
FHIR-based data warehouse is poised to help
insurers meet HHS 2022 nationwide regulation to exchange data in FHIR format.
·
Beyond HIE partnership with Utah HIE expands
regional effort to coordinate data exchange.
The Idaho Health Data Exchange
(IHDE) overcame an existential crisis by modernizing its patient matching technology
and reducing data duplication to less than 1%.
In this
process, IHDE matched more than 5.1 million messages while reducing patient
data duplication rates by 94%, going from 18% to 1% on identity resolution,
yielding more than 2.8 million searchable patient records, and improving care
across the state.
The
10-year-old data exchange began its turnaround two years ago, when it asked
Capital Health Associates to modernize the exchange, says Hans
Kastensmith, the contracted executive director of IHDE and a managing
partner at Capital Health Associates.
Building upon
a base stack of technology from Orion Health, Capital Health Associates adopted
4medica's Big Data MPI [master-patient index] and 4medica's “1% as a Service“
to provide a real-time, transaction cloud-based service to quickly assess,
normalize and cleanse mismatched patient identity data as a foundation for
patient safety, data integrity, and interoperability.
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https://ehrintelligence.com/news/ehr-documenation-styles-may-impact-work-hours-clinician-burden
EHR Documenation Styles May Impact Work Hours, Clinician Burden
Writing
clinical notes in a localized time period in the morning or afternoon may lead
to decreased clinician burden and EHR documentation times.
By Hannah Nelson
November 23,
2021 - First-year medicine residents who wrote clinical notes in a
localized time period during the morning or afternoon spent less time at work,
according to a study
published in JAMIA. The study suggests the need for further research to examine
how different EHR documentation styles may impact clinician burden.
Researchers
examined progress note production styles for Internal Medicine residents at the
University of California, San Francisco who started their first year on June
21, 2018, using unsupervised machine learning methods.
The progress
notes covered 279 inpatient encounters in which patients were admitted during
three two-week periods (last two weeks of June, first two weeks of July, and
first two weeks of October) to capture a sample of periods in the academic
year.
The study
revealed several distinct user styles and potential relationships between these
styles and work hours.
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https://healthitsecurity.com/news/zero-day-attacks-threaten-healthcare-cybersecurity
Zero-Day Attacks Threaten Healthcare Cybersecurity
Zero-day
attacks pose a serious threat to the healthcare sector and can be difficult to
mitigate, HC3 warned in its latest threat brief.
By Jill McKeon
November 22,
2021 - The Health Sector Cybersecurity Coordination Center (HC3) issued
a threat brief outlining risks and mitigation tactics associated with
financially motivated zero-day attacks on the healthcare sector. By nature, it is
impossible to eliminate zero-day attack risks, but patching systems regularly
is the strongest form of defense.
The term
“zero-day” indicates that there is no time between when the vulnerability is
discovered by developers and when it is exploited by bad actors.
It can refer
to a few different mechanisms, HC3 noted. A zero-day attack occurs when threat
actors exploit a vulnerability before a patch can be developed and applied.
Meanwhile, a zero-day exploit is a method that weaponizes a discovered vulnerability,
and a zero-day vulnerability is an unknown flaw in a software program.
Notable
zero-day attacks, regardless of industry, include a 2010 attack on an Iranian
nuclear program that successfully caused centrifuges to self-destruct, and the
2021 SonicWall zero-day ransomware attack in which threat actors exploited a
vulnerability and subsequently deployed FiveHands ransomware.
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https://www.healthdatamanagement.com/articles/how-a-clearer-view-of-healthcare-price-data-will-shake-markets
How a clearer view of healthcare price data will shake markets
Price
transparency in commercial health plans makes cost reduction an imperative for
healthcare providers
Nov 23 2021
Matthew
Harrison
Healthcare
operating model expert , PA Consulting
The recent
CMS hospital price transparency ruling requires providers to release
negotiated rates for 300 “shoppable services” for each of their contracted
payers. The ruling aims to help Americans understand the cost of a hospital
item or service before receiving it.
CMS has also
finalized the payer equivalent; payers will have to make their negotiated rates
with in-network providers public in January 2023. As a result, payers,
providers, and consumers will be able to compare rates across the healthcare
system, making healthcare costs more transparent.
Price
transparency will drive both providers and payers to understand their own
businesses through the data they collect; which is a good thing. It is fair to
say that businesses in all markets are becoming more data driven as they
understand the value that data analytics can produce.
Organizations
that seek to navigate this transition should start by finding the internal
product owner for the chosen system and understanding the reports that can be
generated. Often, the business and IT work together so that the business
suggest areas they need analysis in or the problem they are trying to solve,
then IT can advise on the potential solutions.
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https://www.beckershospitalreview.com/ehrs/patients-who-use-ehr-portals-have-shorter-hospital-stays-analysis-finds.html
Patients who use EHR portals have shorter hospital stays, analysis finds
Jackie Drees - Friday, November
19th, 2021
Having
an active patient portal account is linked to a shorter average length of stay in the
hospital for both COVID-19 patients and heart failure patients, according to a
recent analysis of data from Epic's Health Research Network.
For
the study, researchers examined patient admissions for COVID-19 and heart
failure alongside patients' engagement with patient portals. Results showed
that having a patient portal account was associated with a shorter length of
stay in the hospital.
COVID-19
patients with an active portal account had an average length of stay shorter by
0.09 to 1.1 days, while heart failure patients with portal accounts were
associated with an average length of stay shorter by 0.3 to 0.6 days, according
to the analysis.
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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/patch-early-patch-often-hhs-cyber-arm-issues-warning-zero-day-attacks
'Patch early, patch often': HHS cyber arm issues warning on zero-day
attacks
HC3
researchers say these hacks – where new vulnerabilities exploited before a
patch can be applied – are on the rise.
By Kat Jercich
November 23,
2021 04:21 PM
The
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services' cybersecurity arm issued a threat briefing this past week about "zero-day
attacks" and their potential risk to the healthcare system.
"Mitigating
zero-day attacks completely is not possible – by nature, they are novel and
unexpected attack vectors," said the Health Sector Cybersecurity
Coordination Center in a public presentation.
One
helpful mitigation? "Patch early, patch often, patch completely."
WHY IT
MATTERS
As
the agency outlined in the briefing, a zero-day attack is defined as a
vulnerability exploited by threat actors before a patch is developed and
applied.
The
number of zero-day exploits caught in the wild has skyrocketed this year: By
September 2021, Massachusetts Institute of Technology researchers had tracked at least 66.
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https://ehrintelligence.com/news/ehr-sepsis-alert-volume-raises-clinician-burden-concerns
EHR Sepsis Alert Volume Raises Clinician Burden Concerns
While
hospital census declined during COVID-19, EHR sepsis alert volume increased by
43 percent, highlighting clinician burden concerns.
By Hannah Nelson
November 23,
2021 - Healthcare organizations that leverage the Epic Sepsis Model (ESM)
experienced a 43 percent increase in EHR alerts during COVID-19, according to a
study
published in JAMA Network Open that raises clinician burden concerns.
Sepsis early
warning systems aim to provide timely clinical decision support for recognizing
and treating sepsis. Traditionally, these early warning systems have relied on
simple clinical rules, like systemic inflammatory response syndrome criteria,
to identify patients with possible sepsis. However, these systems have not been
shown to reliably improve patient outcomes.
Systems like
the ESM aim to improve sepsis detection through artificial intelligence
algorithms. However, concerns have arisen recently regarding the potential for
sepsis models to overwhelm
clinicians with EHR alerts.
The
University of Michigan paused ESM alerts in April 2020, about three to four
weeks after its first COVID-19 hospitalization, when nurses reported that the
system was over-alerting them and causing fatigue.
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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/epic-generated-sepsis-alerts-increased-during-covid-19-study-shows
Epic-generated sepsis alerts increased during COVID-19, study shows
Researchers
note that providers have raised concerns about alert fatigue from artificial
intelligence-enabled sepsis models.
By Kat Jercich
November 23,
2021 12:18 PM
A
research letter published in the Journal
of the American Medical Association Network Open this week examined
the number of alerts generated by the Epic Sepsis Model at 24 hospitals before
and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
Researchers
from the University of Michigan Medical School and Washington University School
of Medicine found that the total alerts per day increased by 43% in the three
weeks before and after the first case of COVID-19 in each health system.
"Although
the increase in the proportion of patients generating sepsis alerts in this
study can be explained by the cancellation of elective surgeries and a higher
average acuity among the remaining hospitalized patients, the 43% increase in
total alerts illustrates the increased alerting burden imposed by COVID-19 on a
sepsis model," they wrote.
Epic
declined to respond to requests for comment.
WHY IT
MATTERS
As
noted by the researchers, concerns
have been raised about the potential for sepsis models to cause alert
fatigue, leading to the University of Michigan to pause Epic-generated alerts
in April 2020.
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https://ehrintelligence.com/news/indiana-hie-announces-data-sharing-network-nearly-covers-state
Indiana HIE Announces Data Sharing Network Nearly Covers State
After
large health systems joined the nonprofit HIE this year, the data sharing
network now encompasses clinical data of 18 million patients.
By Hannah Nelson
November 22,
2021 - Indiana Health Information Exchange (IHIE) has announced that its
data sharing network is close to covering the entire state of Indiana,
according to reporting
from The Hamilton County Reporter.
Large health
system contributors in the Fort Wayne area joined the nonprofit HIE this year,
filling a data
sharing gap in the northeast region of the state.
“The COVID
pandemic certainly highlighted the need for a statewide health information
exchange to support public health, and each new facility added is a step towards
a consolidated and statewide data exchange in Indiana,” Drew Richardson, vice
president of product and business development at IHIE, told The Hamilton
Country Reporter.
“While the
focus has been primarily on public health and COVID, we are seeing tremendous
value in these new data sources for all participants including health systems,
providers, payers, and labs,” Richardson continued.
-----
https://healthitsecurity.com/news/32-of-healthcare-organizations-have-a-comprehensive-security-program
32% of Healthcare Organizations Have a Comprehensive Security Program
Core
components of a comprehensive security program include regular reporting of
security deficiencies and having a designated CISO.
By Jill McKeon
November 22,
2021 - Just 32 percent of surveyed acute and ambulatory care organizations
had a comprehensive security program in 2021, according
to the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME) “Digital
Health Most Wired” survey.
CHIME
surveyed thousands of ambulatory, acute, and long-term/post-acute (LTPAC)
facilities to assess how and to what extent healthcare organizations are
implementing information technology. Only 26 percent of LTPAC organizations
were considered to have a comprehensive security program.
In 2020, 34
percent of organizations met the standards for a comprehensive security
program. However, CHIME updated some of its standards in 2021 to reflect
industry advances, raising the bar for surveyed organizations. In 2019, only 24
percent of organizations met the standards for a comprehensive security
program.
Under the new
standard, organizations must report security deficiencies and progress
quarterly rather than annually, and they must give the board a security update
semi-annually rather than annually. In addition, organizations must have a
dedicated chief information security officer (CISO) with presence in the
executive suite rather than just a director of security.
-----
https://www.nextgov.com/it-modernization/2021/11/public-health-admins-are-prioritizing-interoperability-ehr-modernization/186978/
Public Health Admins Are Prioritizing Interoperability with EHR Modernization
By Alexandra
Kelley,
Staff Correspondent
November 19,
2021
Federal agencies using electronic health records systems are hoping
standardizing EHR interfaces will lead to greater cross-departmental and
patient access.
Federal
public health administrators are emphasizing interoperability as government
agencies continue to implement electronic health records (EHRs) across federal
public health agencies.
A
litany of officials from government organizations including the Department of
Health and Human Services and the Department of Defense joined a panel
discussion Thursday talking about the health IT goals between federal
organizations and the ongoing effort to implement EHRs into their daily
business processes.
EHRs
are digital copies of patient health records that turn a patient’s medical
history into a single, shareable file to reduce the administrative and cost
burdens and optimize clinicians’ ability to deliver positive health care
outcomes.
A
major goal of the current efforts to modernize and implement EHRs across
several federal agencies hinge on sophisticated data collection and
cross-department sharing capabilities, with a focus on helping patients access
their records. As more vendors develop their own applications to access and
transfer EHRs, compatibility issues between interfaces make it challenging to
share patient data. Standardization of these platforms would facilitate patient
data sharing between health care providers.
-----
https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/tackling-challenge-integrating-telehealth-seamlessly-ehr
Tackling the challenge of integrating telehealth seamlessly into the EHR
Ophir Lotan
from telemedicine company TytoCare walks readers through this key task now that
virtual care has gone mainstream because of COVID-19.
By Bill Siwicki
November 22,
2021 12:37 PM
Making
caregivers' lives easier should be one of the primary goals of any healthcare
provider organization's IT shop. Throwing too many solutions with too many
workflows and too many log-ins at physicians and nurses is a recipe for
failure.
With
telehealth a mainstream technology today because of the necessities of the
COVID-19 pandemic, caregivers need the technology to be a natural part of their
workflow and an easy way to connect with patients. And many in healthcare have
concluded the best place for telehealth to be initiated by caregivers is within
a patient's electronic health record.
This
has become the modus operandi of many healthcare provider organizations across
the country. But it's not necessarily an easy get. That's why Healthcare
IT News interviewed Ophir Lotan, vice president of product and
customer success at telemedicine company TytoCare. Here, Lotan shares his
expertise with the combined forces of telehealth and EHRs.
Q.
When attempting to integrate telehealth with an EHR, what is the importance of
synchronous versus asynchronous virtual care workflows?
A.
When health systems are looking to integrate telehealth with the EHR, it's
crucial they factor in both synchronous and asynchronous workflows. Synchronous
telehealth appointments would be a typical virtual visit where the physician
and patient are on a video call together in real time. When it comes to
asynchronous telehealth, the patient would record any vital signs with a
telehealth device on their own prior to the virtual appointment.
-----
https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/emea/nhsx-and-nhs-digital-be-axed
NHSX and NHS Digital to be axed
The two
tech bodies will merge with NHS England as part of restructure.
By Tammy Lovell
November 22,
2021 02:21 PM
The
Department of Health and Social Care (DHSC) is due to announce that tech bodies
NHSX and NHS Digital will merge into NHS England as part of a major
restructuring.
In
an internal email, seen by Healthcare IT News, NHSX CEO Matthew Gould said
the brands would be “retired” to accelerate the digital transformation of the
NHS.
According
to Gould, NHS Digital will be incorporated into NHS England as soon as
legislation allows. Ahead of legislative reform, NHS Digital will work in an
integrated way with NHS England, and its CEO Simon Bolton will become the CIO
of NHS England.
Bolton
will report to Dr Tim Ferris, with a reporting line to Amanda Pritchard as
well, and will sit on the NHSE executive team.
NHSX
will evolve into the strategy function of the new transformation directorate.
The strategy function will keep the joint unit status, and also include staff
drawn from across the wider directorate. The strategy function’s role will
continue to include the digital transformation of social care.
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https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/athenahealth-bought-private-equity-firms-hellman-friedman-bain-capital
Athenahealth bought by private equity firms Hellman & Friedman, Bain
Capital
The $17
billion deal marks the second time the cloud health IT vendor has been acquired
in the past three years.
By Kat Jercich
November 22,
2021 11:04 AM
Cloud
computing vendor athenahealth announced Monday that it would be jointly
acquired by affiliates of Bain Capital and Hellman & Friedman for $17
billion.
The
company, which offers electronic health record and physician practice tools,
said the investment was expected to be completed in the first quarter of 2022.
Chair
and CEO Bob Segert will continue in his position, said athenahealth in a press
release, as will the current management team.
"Our
employees, customers and partners are the source of our success and
inspiration as we create a thriving ecosystem that delivers accessible,
high-quality and sustainable healthcare for all," said Segert in a
statement.
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https://histalk2.com/2021/11/19/weekender-11-19-21/
Weekly News Recap
- Athenahealth’s private equity owners
are reportedly in final discussions to sell the company for up to $20
billion.
- Healthcare payment options platform
vendor PayZen raises $15 million.
- HIMSS estimates that modernizing
public health IT systems will cost $30 billion.
- The US Coast Guard completes its
Cerner implementation.
- Healthcare API company Ribbon Health
raises $43.5 million.
- QGenda acquires Schedule360.
- Lightbeam Health Solutions acquires
CareSignal.
- Medidata Solutions co-founder Glen
de Vries dies in a plane crash.
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Enjoy!
David.