Patient Care Summary Exchange: State HIE Conference Call

ONC’s State HIE Technical Assistance Webinar:
Patient Care Summary Exchange and Meaningful Use
August 6, 2010
Excerpted from the State HIE Leadership Forum/Presentations and Webinars Page on August 11, 2010
Slide Set PDF
Audio

The audio (and appears to have been presented in teleconference audio format only) starts out talking about “meaningful use” since  the focus is on the exchange of  Patient Care Summaries and Stage 1 of Meaningful Use. It  includes a discussion about the Continuity of Care Record (CCR) and the newer Continuity of Care Document (CCD); NHIN direct and NHIN Exchange; and several case studies presented by the people involved (NEHEN in Massachussetts; MedVirginia in Virginia, NHIN, and Social Security Administration; KHIE in Kentucky; and Rhode Island HIE and NHIN Direct).

Excerpts selected from slides:
Care Summaries & Stage 1 Meaningful Use
Based on the Meaningful Use Final Rule, “eligible professional, eligible hospital or CAH who transitions or refers their patient to another setting of care or provider of care provides a summary of care record for more than 50% of transitions of care and referrals.”

–Core requirement is to perform at least one test of EHR’s capacity ot electronically exchange information.
–To fulfill menu set requirement, EHR must enable a user to electronically transmit a patient summary record to other providers and organizations including
        –at a minmum, diagnostic test results, problem list, medication list, and a medication allergy list
       –uses HL7 CCD or ASTM CCR

Stage 1 Meaningful Use Objectives that might require sharing of a CCD/CCR:
–Provide patients with an electronic copy of their health information upon request
–Provide a clinical summary for each visit
–Exchange clinical information electronically with other providers and patient authorized entities
–Provide summary care record for each transition of care and referral
–Provide patients with an electronic copy of their discharge instructions and procedures
–Other MU requirements could use clinical documents (e.g. lab results, public health reporting)

Initial Set of Standards
–Requires clinical summaries for patients for each office visit in “human readable” format  and on electronic media
–Clinical summary can (be) either HITSP C32-compliant CCD or ASTM CCR
–Why 2 standards?
            — CCD growing in popularity
            — CCR still in use, especially among early adopters
            — In some circumstances the CCR is easier, faster, and requires fewer resources to implement than the CCD
             — Electronic exchange not required in Stage 1, so why make anyone migrate now from one format to the other?

NHIN Specifications
–Both NHIN Exchaneg and NHIN Direct offers means to transport clinical summaries
–Both mechanisms support Stage 1 Meaningful Use
–Both rely on standards for effective communication
–NHIN Exchange offers the means for transporting care summaries; relies on more spohisticated technology, most suitable when participants do not necesssarily know each other personally
–NHIN Direct offers specifications that enable transport of care summaries; relies on simpler technology, most suitable when participants know each other personally and have a data exchange relationship
–Many states are interested in supporting both models for different workflows.

State HIE Strategies
–Can take several forms, just like statewide HIE can take several forms
–Requires some elements of policy, some elements of infrastructure
–Use data from environmental scan to understand current situation, capabilities, pilots, including other relevant states
–Work with RECs to develop consistent message and appropriate capabilities; rely on their services
–Insist on common terminology and coding
–Keep EHR system vendors’ feet to the fire in implementing capabilities “in the field”
–Recognize that manysites are still using HL7 v2 messages
–Provide HIE services to support care summaries
         –Full services like RLS, MPI, directory, IHE XCA
         –Enabling service for NHIN Direct like provider directory
–Consider the impact of the availability of many clinical documents when exchange is successful

Data Aggregation and Data Content issues to be considered are highlighted.

Health Affairs Blog: Advancing EHR Adoption and Meaningful Use

Washington, DC Follow-up to Health Industry Forum at Brandeis
Covered in Series of Post on Health Affairs Blog
In a series of posts collected on Health Affairs blog by Chris Fleming on August 5, 2010, a range of stakeholders wrote articles inspired by their presentations at an August 5 forum held by Health Affairs and Health Industry Forum. This forum was a follow-up to a July 8, 2010 roundtable hosted at Brandeis University with Health Industry Forum. Both sessions featured National Health IT Coordinator David Blumenthal, who was joined by the new CMS Administrator Donald Berwick in the latest session.

Note: Series of Videos from the August 5 event are now available on the Health Affairs Web site.

–Chris Fleming’s Blog Post:
          Advancing Electronic Health Record Adoption and Meaningful Use
–Blumenthal and Berwick:
          Adoption and Meaningful Use of EHRs–The Journey Begins
–Samuel Nussbaum and Charles Kennedy, WellPoint:
          WellPoint: Supporting Meaningful Use Through Incentive Alignment And Hospital Financing
–Donald Fischer, Highmark Blue Cross Blue Shield:
          Highmark: Using EHRs To Drive Quality Improvement
–John Toussaint, ThedaCare:
          ThedaCare: Meaningful Use And Continuous Improvement
–Will Bloedow, Retired minister and a ThedaCare patient:
          Through A Patient’s Eyes: The Value of EHRs
–Robert Laskowski, Christiana Care Health System:
          Christiana Care: A Leadership Moment For Hospitals And Physicians
–Gary Gottlieb and Thomas Lee:
          Partners HealthCare Applauds EHR Meaningful Use Regs (posted Friday, July 23)
–Humayun Chaudhry, Fed Of State Medical Boards:
          Federation Of State Medical Boards: Maintenance of Licensure and Health IT
–Kevin Weiss and Sheldon Horowitz, ABMS:
          American Board of Med. Specialties: Aligning Maintenance Of Certification and Meaningful Use

CMS Issues Tip Sheets on EHR Medicare Incentives for Professionals, Hospitals, and Critial Access Hospitals

Now available on the CMS EHR Incentive Programs website
Emailed notice from ONC on August 4, 2010.
Added direct links to PDFs.
Get up-to-date and accurate information about the Medicare and Medicaid EHR incentive programs from CMS at http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentiveprograms. Visit the website to get specifics about the program and download our new tip sheets.

Tip Sheets for Eligible Professionals: 

  • Medicare EHR Incentive Payments for Eligible Professionals 
    [Link to PDF]
    This tip sheet describes which types of individual practitioners can participate in the Medicare EHR incentive program. It provides user friendly information about incentive payment amounts and describes how they are calculated for fee for service and Medicare advantage providers. It also describes payment adjustments beginning in 2015 for EPs who are not meaningful users of certified EHR technology.  
  • Medicare EHR Incentive Program, PQRI and E-Prescribing Comparison
    [Link to PDF]
    Learn what opportunities are available to Medicare Eligible Professionals to receive incentive payments for participating in important Medicare initiatives. This fact sheet provides information on eligibility, timeframes, and maximum payments for each program.

Now available on the CMS EHR Incentive Programs website http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentivePrograms.  Select the Medicare Eligible Professional tab on the left, and then scroll to “Downloads.”

Tip Sheets for Hospitals: 

  • EHR Incentive Program for Medicare Hospitals
    [Link to PDF]
    Learn which Medicare hospitals are eligible for incentive payments. (See the separate tip sheet for Critical Access Hospitals below.) This sheet provides user friendly information about the factors which impact incentive payment amounts and provides sample payment calculations.
      
  • EHR Incentive Program for Critical Access Hospitals
    [Link to PDF]
    How are Medicare incentive payments calculated for CAHs? When can they be earned? Learn more in this informative discussion of the calculation of incentive payments. Sample calculations are provided. This sheet also provides information on how reimbursement will be reduced for CAHs which have not demonstrated meaningful use of certified EHR technology by 2015. 
     

Now available on the CMS EHR Incentive Programs website http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentivePrograms.  Select the Hospitals tab on the left, and then scroll to “Downloads.”

New ‘Meaningful Use’ Resources Center published on ONC site

Meaningful Use Resources Page on Office of National Coordinator for Health IT Web site
Accessed on August 3, 2010; posted by ONC on August 2, 2010.

Secretary Sebelius’ Announcement (July 13, 2010)

Standards and Certification Final Rule

Privacy and Security

Publications

ONC’s Seidman Blogs on Guiding Principles for Meaningful Use Revisions

Guiding Principles for Stage 1 Meaningful Use Adjustments
Friday, July 30th, 2010 | Posted by: Joshua Seidman PhD originally on ONC’s Health IT Buzz Blog and reposted by e-Healthcare Marketing here.

The release of the CMS Medicare & Medicaid EHR Incentive Program Final Rule [link] on July 14 marked the end of the Stage 1 process for defining “meaningful use.” The final steps of that process involved reviewing, synthesizing, analyzing and reacting to more than 2,200 comments received from the public. The comments addressed big-picture principles and arcane details, and just about everything in between. We were very grateful for the public input and are very excited to announce the Stage 1 Meaningful Use requirements.

Having been part of the team at ONC and CMS that got to review thousands of pages of input, I wanted to share some thoughts on four principles that shaped decisions around changes from the Notice of Proposed Rule Making to the Final Rule. In the end, the changes to meaningful use boiled down to four themes: 

  • Flexibility: We were convinced by commenters that the all-or-nothing approach was not a practical solution for getting the majority of providers on the escalator to meaningful use of EHRs. Building flexibility into the program makes allowances for providers facing a wide variety of external challenges to achieve Stage 1 meaningful use. As a former Surgeon General said about medication adherence, “Medications don’t work in patients who don’t take them.” Likewise, EHRs have no benefits if providers don’t implement them.
  • Simplicity: We increased feasibility of calculating HIT functionality measures by substantially reducing the reporting burden for providers. This was primarily achieved by eliminating manual chart review requirements and using electronic calculation of denominators for the HIT functionality measure denominators.
  • Consistency: Wherever we could, we tried to align the program requirements—hospitals and professionals, Medicare and Medicaid. Registration for the Medicare incentive programs will begin in January 2011, and State Medicaid agencies will launch any time, beginning in January 2011. With the possible exception of a very limited set of public health functionalities, the Medicare and Medicaid will have the same meaningful use objectives and measures.
  • Quality & Patient-Centeredness: We always evaluated the three principles above with an eye toward the fundamentals of meaningful use: making care delivery more patient-centered and improving the quality, safety and efficiency of health care. We never lost sight of the laser focus that the meaningful use principle provided: It’s not about the technology; it’s about transforming health care delivery for the benefit of patients and everybody else involved in their care.
    ###

    To comment on this post, go directly to ONC blog.
    Thanks to Blackford Middleton whose tweet brought this to my attention.

Public Health as Meaningful Use Criteria

HIT Policy Committee/Meaningful Use Workgroup
Focus on Public Health

Washington, DC  July 29, 2010
“What effects public health agencies should expect on population health as we move toward meaningful use of certified EHRs?”

9:00 a.m. Call to Order/Roll Call – Judy Sparrow, Office of the National Coordinator
9:05 a.m. Meeting Objectives and Outcomes: Effect of EHR using Meaningful Use on Public Health Agencies & Their Various Populations
–George Hripcsak, Co-Chair, and
–Arthur Davidson, Denver Public Health   

9:15 a.m. Panel 1: Achieving population health through meaningful use: How do governmental public health agencies view the process to date?
Moderator: Art Davidson
Peter Briss, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention
Guthrie Birkhead, New York State Department of Health
Seth Foldy, Wisconsin State Health Officer
Marcus Cheatham, Ingham County Health Department, Michigan
Perry Smith, Council of State and Territorial Epidemiologists  

10:45 a.m. Panel 2: Experiences and current status of MU-like projects: How do governmental public health agencies use MU-like criteria or measures to achieve population health?
Moderator: James Figge
Nedra Garrett, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention
Amanda Parsons, New York City Department of Health
Virginia Caine, Marion County Health Department, Indiana
Amy Zimmerman, Rhode Island Health Department
Steven Hinrichs, Nebraska Health Department  

12:15 p.m. LUNCH BREAK
1:15 p.m. Panel 3: Potential areas for HIT Policy Committee consideration: Where should the committee focus its attention to support MU measures and criteria that complement the public health mission?
Moderator: Laura Conn
Eileen Storey, National Institute for Occupational Safety & Health
David Ross, Public Health Informatics Institute
James Buehler, Centers for Disease Control & Prevention
Martin LaVenture, Minnesota Office for Health Information Technology
R. Gibson Parrish
Don Detmer  

2:45 p.m. Workgroup Discussion
3:15 p.m. Public Comment
3:30 p.m. Adjourn  

Instructions and Questions for Panelists
Background Testimony from this hearing will help the Meaningful Workgroup formulate recommendations to the HIT Policy Committee and National Coordinator on what effects public health agencies might expect on population health as the nation moves toward meaningful use (MU) of certified EHRs.   

Format of Presentation: The Workgroup respectfully requests that panelists limit their prepared remarks to 5-7 minutes. This will allow the Workgroup to ask questions of the panelists and allow every presenter time to present his or her remarks. We have found that this creates a conversation for a full understanding of the issue. You may submit as much detailed written testimony as you would like, and the Workgroup members will have reviewed this material in detail before the hearing. PowerPoints will not be needed.  

Pre-Presentation Questions/Themes: The questions below represent areas the Workgroup intends to explore at the hearing. Please feel free to use them in preparing your oral and written testimony; the Workgroup recognizes that certain questions may not apply to all presenters.  

Hearing on: “What effects public health agencies should expect on population health as we move toward meaningful use of certified EHRs”   

As providers across the country begin to meaningfully use health information technology to improve health care, we acknowledge the need to pay attention to achieving population health through meaningful use from the viewpoint of governmental public health agencies. Governmental public health organizations have authority over their respective jurisdictions — an authority which comes with a responsibility to convene and collaborate and contribute to societal responsibility through enhanced public health capacity. Public health agencies will be affected by rapid information flows promoted by the adoption of certified EHR products.   

By panel, the speakers have been asked to address the following questions in their testimony:   

Panel 1: Achieving population health through meaningful use: How do governmental public health (PH) agencies view the process to date?   

What are the current electronic data systems, are they interoperable and do they connect to any EHRs for mandated electronic reporting? From your unique jurisdictional view, does your PH agency have the capacity to use the 3 types of data to be sent under Stage 1 meaningful use (MU) criteria in a way that impacts population health? What do you perceive as barriers to MU of PH data and information to achieve desired population health outcomes? How are governmental public health agencies planning to leverage increasing access to community HIT assets (e.g., EHR data, chronic disease registries and MU criteria) or other ONC efforts (e.g., HIE, REC, NHIN, Beacon, SHARP) to support improved population and public health outcomes? Based on your experience, how is PH working toward a more integrated, enterprise approach to data and information sharing and interoperable infrastructure promoted through MU criteria and measures to support improved population health outcomes?   

Panel 2: Experiences and current status of MU-like projects: How do governmental public health agencies use MU-like criteria or measures to achieve population health?   

What MU-like data and public health applications and/or public health-EHR projects have you developed in your jurisdiction? How do they impact on public health surveillance, care coordination or other essential public health services? How might the results of your public health-EHR project inform and be learning opportunities for: 1) other public health jurisdictions, 2) HIT policy development, 3) evaluation of Stage 1 MU criteria, and 4) considerations for Stages 2 and 3 MU criteria? What are your next priorities for the described public health-EHR project? What should be logical next steps for MU criteria development?   

Panel 3: Potential areas where the HIT Policy Committee consideration: Where should the committee focus its attention to support MU measure and criteria that complement the public health mission?   

What policy, legal and/or technical issues do you perceive as barriers to getting to improved population health outcomes? Are there any specific approaches to data standards, aggregation and/or infrastructure that would help achieve better population health outcomes? How should PH contribute to the concept of a learning health system? What future state might we envision as public health agencies gain access to population health information to drive improved health outcomes?   

Conceptual Comments as Background Document

The focus of this testimony revolves around 2 primary questions:
1. What population health effects should public health agencies expect as the nation moves  toward meaningful use (MU) of certified EHRs? 
2.
How can governmental public health agencies leverage these MU efforts and investments and the goals of a learning health system to improve population health?  

The HIT Strategic Framework document makes reference to population health in numerous places. A foot-note defines population health as:
“Population health includes quality improvement, biomedical research, and routine and emergency public health preparedness and response.”    

The scope of this session is not as broad as this foot-note. At another date, some issues (e.g., biomedical research) may be dealt with by the Meaningful Use Workgroup or the HIT Policy Committee. Today’s focus will be on the phrases “quality improvement … and routine and emergency public health preparedness and response”. Certainly some discussion may touch on other pieces of this Framework definition but we seek to limit the scope.  
To provide some guidelines to our invited testifiers, the Workgroup attempted to give more clarity to the meaning of population health. Admittedly imperfect, each panelist was provided the following definitions to assure a consistent context for discussion: 

  

Population health: a conceptual approach to measure the aggregate health of a community or jurisdictional region with a collective goal of improving those measurements and reducing health inequities among population groups. Stepping beyond the individual-level focus of mainstream medicine, population health acknowledges and addresses a broad range of social determinant factors that impact population health. Emphasizing environment, social structure, and resource distribution, population health is less focused on the relatively minor impact that medicine and healthcare have on improving health overall.   

Governmental public health: a core infrastructural entity that organizes an extended community (i.e., health care delivery system, schools, social services, academia, and legislative/regulatory and justice systems) to improve population health  
Others have differing opinions about the meaning, required infrastructure, and target population(s) when discussing population health. The following table provides some examples of how varying responsibility perspectives may define the targeted population. The primary focus of this session is the shaded governmental line. Since governmental public health is defined as the core of an extended community infrastructure, many public health actions will both contribute to and/or leverage responsibilites described on other lines. 

  

Population Health Approached by Responsibility Perspective.
This hearing focuses on the Government Responsibility line. 

 

Population Health Approaches by Responsibility Perspective (this hearing will primarily focus on the shaded line) Responsibility     

By whom Target Population     

Description     

Examples     

Societal     

Broad public-private coalition     

Everyone     

Resource distribution, environmental, and social determinant factors affecting the population’s within a community     

Societal responses to: 1) obesity, 2) an oil spill, or 3) general health disparities     

Governmental     

Local, state, federal, and WHO     

Everyone     

Public health agencies that focus on the entire population     

Targeted efforts to immunize against H1N1. Identifying and controlling an outbreak of E coli  Post marketing surveillance and management of rosiglitazone adverse events    

Accountable Care Organization (ACO)     

Hospital, primary care physicians, specialists and other medical professionals in a medical referral region.     

ACO member’s patients     

Services provided under fee-for-service, but organization’s members coordinate care for shared patients with the goal of meeting and improving on quality benchmarks.     

Joint care accountability and shared cost savings from quality and efficiency gains for patient outcomes     

Health care organization (HCO)     

Quality coordinators, providers and ancillary staff     

HCO patients     

Quality improvement efforts within the HCO, focused on the HCO population     

Care quality and efficiency and patient cared for in a specific HCO     

Case Management     

Insurer     

Insured patients     

Population selected for complexity, cost of care and desire to improve outcomes and reduce overall expenses     

Patients with diabetes and cardiac co-morbidities who may be offered specific in-home services     

 

 MU measures and criteria present an opportunity to integrate efforts across the table rows, creating a more societal perspective. The same population may be represented on multiple rows, suggesting a potential for coordination. The HIT Strategic Framework provides a rationale for that coordination. That document is included in your packet to guide development of your testimony. 

Governmental public health organizations invited to testify today have authority over their respective jurisdictions. That authority comes with a responsibility to convene, collaborate and contribute to the societal responsibility described in the table, by enhancing public health capacity. Speaking with and on behalf of the spectrum of health and health care system participants in their jurisdiction is a governmental role. Governmental public health agencies and their various populations (or population perspectives) will be affected by rapid information flows promoted by adoption and meaningful use of certified EHR products. The front line public health practitioners who participated in the planning of these sessions and those invited to testify will hopefully provide a vision of an learning health care system that optimizes knowledge generation throughout the interoperable system described in the strategic framework. 

 

  

Conceptual Comments as Background [PDF 39 KB]

Panel 1 

Panel 2  

 Panel 3 

 

 

 

Federal Register Pubs Final Rules on EHRs: CMS, ONC, July 28, 2010

FINAL RULES Published in Print PDF Versions and Navigable HTML
Two days after the 75-year anniversary of the Federal Register Act, the Federal Register published final rules for CMS and ONC.
Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Electronic Health Record Incentive Program
A  Rule by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services on 07/28/2010
PDF OF FINAL PRINTED RULE    275 Pages
HTML VERSION WITH NAVIGABLE TABLE OF CONTENTS
SHORT URL: http://federalregister.gov/a/2010-17207
SUMMARY  This final rule implements the provisions of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) (Pub. L. 111-5) that provide incentive payments to eligible professionals (EPs), eligible hospitals and critical access hospitals (CAHs) participating in Medicare and Medicaid programs that adopt and successfully demonstrate meaningful use of certified electronic health record (EHR) technology. This final rule specifies—the initial criteria EPs, eligible hospitals, and CAHs must meet in order to qualify for an incentive payment; calculation of the incentive payment amounts; payment adjustments under Medicare for covered professional services and inpatient hospital services provided by EPs, eligible hospitals and CAHs failing to demonstrate meaningful use of certified EHR technology; and other program participation requirements. Also, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) will be issuing a closely related final rule that specifies the Secretary’s adoption of an initial set of standards, implementation, specifications, and certification criteria for electronic health records. ONC has also issued a separate final rule on the establishment of certification programs for health information technology.

Health Information Technology: Initial Set of Standards, Implementation Specifications, and Certification Criteria for Electronic Health Record Technology
A Rule by the Health and Human Services Department on 07/28/2010
PDF OF FINAL PRINTED RULE     65 pages
HTML VERSION WITH NAVIGABLE TABLE OF CONTENTS
SHORT URL:  http://federalregister.gov/a/2010-17210
SUMMARY
The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is issuing this final rule to complete the adoption of an initial set of standards, implementation specifications, and certification criteria, and to more closely align such standards, implementation specifications, and certification criteria with final meaningful use Stage 1 objectives and measures. Adopted certification criteria establish the required capabilities and specify the related standards and implementation specifications that certified electronic health record (EHR) technology will need to include to, at a minimum, support the achievement of meaningful use Stage 1 by eligible professionals, eligible hospitals, and/or critical access hospitals (hereafter, references to “eligible hospitals” in this final rule shall mean “eligible hospitals and/or critical access hospitals”) under the Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs. Complete EHRs and EHR Modules will be tested and certified according to adopted certification criteria to ensure that they have properly implemented adopted standards and implementation specifications and otherwise comply with the adopted certification criteria.

SAVE THE DATES: CMS Education Series for Providers on the Medicare and Medicaid Electro EHR Incentive Programs

SAVE THE DATES: CMS Education Series for Providers on the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Record (EHR) Incentive Programs
Emailed from ONC on July 28, 2010.

Medicare Learning Network

Medicare Learning Network

The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) invites you to join us for a series of national provider calls addressing the specifics of the Medicare and Medicaid EHR incentive programs for hospitals and individual practitioners. Learn the specifics on what you need to participate in the these incentive programs –

  • who is eligible,
  • how much are the incentives and how are they calculated,
  • what you need to do to get started,
  • when the program begins and other major milestones regarding participation and payment,
  • how to report on Meaningful Use measures
  • where to find helpful resources and more.

Hear from the experts who wrote the rules! Ask your questions!

EHR Incentive Programs for Eligible Professionals:
A session just for individual practitioners on the specifics about the Medicare & Medicaid EHR incentive program
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
2:00-3:30 pm EST

EHR Incentive Programs for Hospitals:
A session just for hospitals on the specifics about the Medicare & Medicaid EHR incentive program
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
2:00-3:30 pm EST

EHR Questions and Answers for Hospitals and Individual Practitioners:
Have questions? Join this session to have an opportunity to ask a question and hear answers by our panel of experts on the Medicare and Medicaid EHR incentive programs.
Thursday, August 12, 2010
2:00-3:30 pm EST

Save the dates! Information on how to register for these calls is forthcoming.  

Materials will be made available prior to each training at the following web address: http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentivePrograms/05_Spotlight_and_Upcoming_Events.asp  

Cannot attend? A transcript and MP3 file of the call will be available approximately 3 weeks after the call at http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentivePrograms/05_Spotlight_and_Upcoming_Events.asp  on the CMS website.

Be sure to visit CMS’ web section on the Medicare & Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs at: http://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentivePrograms  to get the latest information. Visit often!

Visit the Medicare Learning Network  ~ it’s free!

Health Information Exchange: From Princeton to Washington, DC Conferences

July 22, 2010: HIE Day in Two Cities
WASHINGTON, DC (July 22, 2010) — With more than 400 delegates to the National HIE Summit from 38 states meeting in the nation’s capital today and over 125 delegates to the New Jersey HIE Summit & Expo meeting in Princeton, NJ, you can see federalism at work in Health IT.

In the Washington, DC Conference produced by the national eHealth Initiative, and hosted at the Omni Shoreham Hotel, the the topics of the day are:
Getting Started: What to do first?
Sustainability: What works?
Getting to Meaningful Use
Inter-State Coordination
Understanding and Connecting to the NHIN
Engaging Consumers in Health Information Exchange
Measuring Your Progress: What Really Matters?
Beyond Implementation: Planning for Privacy

The Washington session ends with a networking reception.

The Princeton, NJ Conference produced by NJTC (New Jersey Technology Council), and hosted at the New Jersey Hospital Association Conference Center, will cover:
NJ Health IT Extension Center (NJ-HITEC)
Colleen Woods, newly appointed Statewide Health IT Coordinator for New Jersey, will make a presentation.
Components of a Successful HIE
                 Developing a Sustainable Business Model for HIE
                 Managing an Effective Procurement Process
                 Engaging and Supporting Physicians in the Adoption of Heath IT
                 Building Public Private Sector Partnerships for HIE
HIPAA HITECH – Audits, Breaches & Fines
Navigating the Winding Road
                 Know Your Obligations
                 Identify and Address Gaps
                 Security Rule Compliance
                 Test Your Program and Consider Lessons Learned now Your Obligations
HIE Privacy, Security and Compliance
                 Understanding Meaningful Use Requirements
                 Understanding and Applying the New Standards Requirements
                 Developing and Implementing Strong Privacy and Security Policies
                 Advancing Administrative Simplification Efforts

Technologies that Transform Patient Care    

The Princeton session ends with an ice cream reception.   

Personal Notes
In Princeton, Vikas Khosla, President and CEO of  BluePrint Healthcare IT (and my boss), is participating in a panel discussion and focusing on  ”Developing and Implementing Strong Privacy and Security Policies” and joining two of my colleagues Gregory Michaels, Director, Security and Compliance; and Pam Kaur, Client Services Team Lead, who will be attending and working BluePrint’s exhibit table.

In Washington, as VP, Strategic Development and Public Policy, for BluePrint (and as e-Healthcare Marketing blogger), I will be listening, learning, meeting, and greeting state HIE coordinators and Health IT folks from across the country. And we’ll compare notes when the day is done.

BluePrint also issued a press release July 21, 2010 announcing two products that support secure health information exchange by lowering barriers to HIE interoperability and promoting patient confidence: HIE Secure and EMR Secure.

While e-Healthcare Marketing independently collects and reports information on Health IT including EHRs, ONC, CMS, and public policy, a view of the blogger and his business colleagues seemed worth noting today. Thank you for reading.
Mike Squires

Final Rules–Analysis Roundup Starting w/AHIMA, Halamka, HIMSS

Latest analysis and some catch-up from last week

Journal of AHIMA
Kevin Heubusch posted a chart on July 19, 2010 “Tracking Changes in the Menaingful Use Rule,” showing Stage 1 Objectives for Eligible Professionals, Eligible Hospitals and Critical Access Hospitals (CAH), Stage 1 Measures, and Changes from proposed rule.

John Halamka’s Life as a Healthcare CIO
John Halamka  posted “A Meaningful Use and Standards Rule FAQ” on July 19, 2010, providing his personal interpretation of answers to five questions he’s received since the final rules have been announced.

HIMSS
Health Information Management Systems Society (HIMSS) provides several updates on its “Members Only” resource page, “Meaningful Use, Certification Criteria and Standards, and HHS Certification Process,’ between July 13 and July 19, 2010. The latest update, ”Medicare & Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs – What’s Different Between the NPRM and the Final Rule?” reviews the major differences in a five-page document. 

iHealthBeat
Kate Ackerman, iHealthBeat Senior Editor, wrote “Long-Awaited Final Rule on ‘Meaningful Use’ Strikes Compromise” on July 15, 2010 with brief analysis and reactions from experts.

O’Reilly Radar
Brian Ahier posted “Analysis: A defining moment for ‘meaningful use’: How new rules will affect patients, providers, and electronic health records” on July 15, 2010.

Chilmark Research
John Moore provided his viewpoint in “Meaningful Use Perspectve & Resources,” posted on July 15, 2010.