Hackers last week broke into a Virginia state Web site used by pharmacists to track prescription drug abuse. They deleted records on more than 8 million patients and replaced the site's homepage with a ransom note demanding $10 million for the return of the records, according to a posting on Wikileaks.org, an online clearinghouse for leaked documents.
Healthcare providers are antsy to start working toward becoming "meaningful users" of electronic health record technology so that they can claim some of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act's financial incentives when they become available in fiscal year 2011 and 2012. While providers wait for the government's definition of "meaningful use" of EHR technology, which ultimately is the only definition that matters, they did receive some guidance this past week as just about every association and industry group released their own definition of what meaningful use should include. Here's a breakdown of those recommendations.
CHIME: The College of Healthcare Information Management Executives says that meaningful use should focus on the use of quality metrics and outcomes regardless of the technology in place, a phased approach should be used to encourage adoption, the industry should explore alternative ways to connectivity in the short term that can lead to participation in a health information exchange, and the industry should consider alternative ways to exchange health data other than the continuity of care document—at least initially—because some organizations may not have the capability to immediately deploy the CCD.
AHIMA: The American Health Information Management Association says the most crucial element of meaningful use is the widespread adoption of certified EHRs and that the expectations are applied uniformly across all industry segments and not vary by payer, patient, or provider. AHIMA recommends the focus should be on the end goals to improve quality, cost and health system performance not the technology itself; the initial criteria should be based on what is achievable with the current technology with the measures becoming more strict in the next several years; the certifying body should be the Certification Commission for Healthcare Information Technology; it should be measured and reported in a way that minimizes manipulation; and it should be relevant to consumers.
AMIA: The American Medical Informatics Association recommends that meaningful use should focus on process and care improvements over time, include EHR functionality and capability, and establish approaches to measure meaningful use. The AMIA notes that EHRs have the potential to support and enhance clinical care and decision-making, but simply implementing an EHR does not mean that the organization will effectively use the system or achieve the desirable patient outcomes and changes to clinical processes.
ANI: The Alliance for Nursing Informatics says meaningful use should include patient-centered documentation—initially focusing on patient summary data—that can enhance cross continuum communication and improve safety, quality, and processes of care delivery; collect standardized clinical performance measures as a byproduct of care delivery and clinician documentation; use processes and infrastructure defined by HITSP—initially focusing on a subset of existing NQF-endorsed measures—to submit quality measures; use existing initiatives such as HITSP and IHE to guide standards use within all systems that record, transmit, collect, and share information for care delivery; and expand the definition of "meaningful user" to include registered nurses and advanced practice registered nurses.
HIMSS: The Health Information Management Systems Society recommends that CCHIT be the certifying body of EHRs; using an incremental approach to adopt metrics that can be reasonably captured and reported beginning in fiscal years 2011 and 2012, and then made increasingly stringent using intervals of not less than two years; bridging the existing gaps in interoperability of health information by creating new standards and implementation guides in coordination with HITSP and IHE; and reconciling the gap between "certified EHR technologies," "best of breed," and "open source" technologies.
The types of features and functions HIMSS recommends in phase one for hospitals are:
Major ancillary department information systems (lab, pharmacy, and radiology) and a clinical data repository that are interfaced with the patient accounting system.
Discrete clinical observations electronically entered and available to clinicians throughout the organization. Physician documentation is desirable, but optional.
A combination of compliance metrics and National Quality Forum-endorsed quality measures that align with national quality and performance goals. The hospital's EHR must be able to capture and report relevant statistics without manual intervention. For example, baseline reporting of percentage of medical orders entered electronically into the EHR by physicians; re-admissions within 24 hours of discharge; duplicate diagnostic test orders; and present-on-admission tests compliance.
The electronic exchange of health information via scanned documents, text documents, or XML transactions.
Phase one recommendations for physicians include:
An EHR infrastructure that has clinical data display and computerized practitioner order entry, with independent licensed practitioners entering the order.
Electronic prescribing technology to transmit prescriptions to pharmacies.
A sub-set of existing National Quality Forum-endorsed measures that align with national quality and performance goals. For example, baseline reporting of medical orders entered electronically by physicians; Agency for Health Research & Quality quality outcomes; National Priorities Partnership goals, convened by National Quality Forum; adverse drug events; and percentage of prescriptions electronically sent to the pharmacy.
The Markle Foundation recommends seven principles for meaningful use and qualification of certified EHRs in the report, Achieving the Health IT Objectives of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.
The overarching goals of health IT investments should improve healthcare quality, reduce growth in costs, stimulate innovation, and protect privacy. "If the goals and metrics are not clear before technology is commissioned and the incentives are offered, the government will risk wasting valuable resources and losing support from both healthcare providers and the public for further health IT investments," the report says.
The definition should focus on the needs of patients and consumers, not on the mere presence or functions of technology. The end goals cannot be achieved through the installation of software or hardware alone, so it is essential that the information is being used to deliver care and support processes that improve patient health status and outcomes.
The definition should be demonstrable in the first years of implementation without creating undue burden on clinicians and practices. For example, improving medication management and coordination of care is an early opportunity to achieve meaningful use. It should initially rely on standard information types such as recent medications and laboratory results that are electronic and already widely adopted.
The definition should gradually expand to encompass more ambitious health improvement aims over time.
The definition of "qualified or certified EHR technology" should support the goals of meaningful use, security, and privacy. For a technology to be certified, it should embed the capability for clinical practices and hospitals to attain meaningful use without undue additional reporting burdens.
Metrics for achieving meaningful use should enable a broad range of providers to participate. The definition should reward the actual use of information and not the mere purchase of specific hardware or software products.
Consumers, patients, and their families should benefit from health IT through improved access to personal health information without sacrificing their privacy.
There are a few key areas that the industry agrees on. Namely, that the focus of "meaningful use" should be on the desired outcome, which is improving quality of care, reducing costs, and making care delivery more efficient, not the technology itself. In addition, the definition should encourage the widespread adoption of EHRs by using an incremental approach that requires more stringent criteria as time progresses.
Now providers must wait and see if the government takes the industry's recommendation and defines meaningful use in a way that a large number of hospitals and physicians can achieve with the technology that is currently available.
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After more than a weeklong swine flu scare that saw school closings, travel warnings, and a media frenzy, officials around the world are now trying to ease concerns after health officials determined the H1N1 virus is not as deadly as originally thought.
The U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention announced yesterday that closing schools once a student falls ill with swine flu may no longer be worth the toll on students and families, because the illness will soon be present almost everywhere in the country and few cases have been severe. Also on Monday, Mexican officials announced that the epidemic appears to have slowed there and that commerce and government work would restart Wednesday after a five-day shutdown.
The swine flu scare, and subsequent reaction to it, provides examples of the best and worst reactions to what can happen during a pandemic. As World Health Organization Director Margaret Chan, MD, said in a statement last week: “The world is better prepared for an influenza pandemic than at any time in history.”
“Preparedness measures undertaken because of the threat from H5N1 avian influenza were an investment, and we are now benefitting from this investment,” Chan said in the statement. “For the first time in history, we can track the evolution of a pandemic in real-time.”
The quick reaction by the WHO and other agencies to get information out quickly to governments allowed for heightened surveillance, early detection and treatment that potentially saved lives.
As CDC Acting Director Richard Besser said in Monday’s press briefing on H1N1, there are 35 known hospitalizations in the United States and one reported death. Also yesterday, the World's Health Organization reported 898 cases in 18 countries.
“I like to each day put this in context with seasonal flu,” Besser said during the briefing. “With seasonal flu, we see in the United States over 30 million cases. We see 200,000 hospitalizations and, on average, 36,000 deaths.”
Besser was quick to add, however, that the encouraging signs surrounding swine flu were not a signal for people to let up their guard.
“Personal responsibility, the things that we talk about every day about hand-washing, about covering your cough with your sleeve and not with your hand, about staying home when you're sick, about keeping your children home when they're sick, those things are critically important,” Besser said.
These precautions were readily available to people around the world almost immediately after swine flu was detected—helping people protect themselves and their families.
The ease with which swine flu information spread was also a curse, however. With the influx of media coverage, people around the world flooded emergency rooms at the first sign of a sniffle, or sometimes with no symptoms at all, to make sure they did not have the swine flu.
In China, Mexicans visiting the country were rounded up and quarantined. Mexico's foreign minister said Mexican citizens with no signs of infection had been isolated in unacceptable conditions in China, according to an article in the Wall Street Journal. China also created friction with Canada over banned pig imports and a group of quarantined Canadian university students.
But China may have just been reacting to past experiences: Chinese officials were accused of covering up the spread of SARS in 2002 and 2003.
It also encouraged countries to work together to fight the spread: last week Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius announced that the U.S. would purchase an additional 13 million treatment courses to help fight influenza, including the 2009 H1N1 flu virus. The additional treatment courses were added to the Strategic National Stockpile, and HHS began moving 400,000 treatment courses to Mexico to help slow the spread of the H1N1 virus, according to an HHS statement.
Also last week, the U.S. Agency for International Development announced that it is providing an additional $5 million to the World Health Organization and the Pan American Health Organization in emergency support for efforts to detect and contain swine flu in Mexico.
So did the quick reaction by governments around the world slow the spread of swine flu? Did the Internet providing readily available information help people protect themselves against the flu? Did healthcare providers instituting systems to handle an influx of patients with flu-like symptoms save lives?
These questions are almost impossible to answer—it is difficult to determine whether the reaction helped countries save lives, especially since the virus was not as deadly as once thought. But one thing is certain, should another, more virulent flu strain come, the world will be better prepared.
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Ingenix has announced that Sutter Connect, a Sutter Health affiliate and healthcare management and administrative services company, has signed a five-year contract for Ingenix Impact Intelligence and services from Ingenix Consulting. Through the agreement, Sutter Connect will offer physicians in the Sutter Medical Network access to performance metrics and services they can use to measure and improve medical care and delivery, according to a release.
IBM Global Financing is adding a $2 billion financing component to help providers finance health IT initiatives tied to the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The Armonk, NY-based company said that the move will help "U.S. organizations move ahead with IT projects that could improve their infrastructure or competitive edge and point them in the direction of economic recovery."
A computer worm that has alarmed security experts around the world has crawled into hundreds of medical devices at dozens of hospitals in the United States and other countries, according to technologists. The worm, known as "Conficker," has not harmed any patients, they say, but it poses a potential threat to hospital operations.
The Karnataka High Court in India has forced an end to the four-day-old, statewide strike by junior doctors. The court had called for severe action against the doctors, including suspension or cancellation of certificates. The junior doctors returned to work, but wore black armbands as a mark of their continuing protest. The doctors claimed that the withdrawal was a "temporary suspension" and they would resume the strike if government fails to address their problems.
Every year, rich Indonesians spend far more than $1 billion for their medical expenses overseas, according to the research and consulting firm Frost and Sullivan. The findings means a big potential loss for the domestic healthcare business, said Frost and Sullivan representatives. The figures confirm earlier statements by Fahmi Idris, chairman of the Indonesian Medical Association, that suggested at least 1 million Indonesians every year go abroad seeking health services and spend well over $1 billion.
Death rates of every NHS hospital in England will be published on a government Web site, officials have announced. Health Secretary Alan Johnson said patients will gain access to information about mortality rates to help compare the risks of treatment in different hospitals.
Two of the oldest government hospitals in Abu Dhabi will be replaced with state-of-the-art facilities, according to an announcement by the health services company Seha. Once completed, the replacements for Al Mafraq Hospital and Al Ain Hospital will have almost 1,400 beds between them. Both facilities are more than 25 years old.