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HIStalk Practice Interviews Laura Adams, President & CEO, Rhode Island Quality Institute

July 14, 2015 News No Comments

Laura Adams is president and CEO of Rhode Island Quality Institute, a nonprofit organization that provides a range of services to healthcare stakeholders across the state, including management of the CurrentCare HIE.

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Tell me about yourself, Rhode Island Quality Institute, and its role in CurrentCare.
I became the founding CEO of the Rhode Island Quality Institute (RIQI) in 2001 after having experience in hospital administration, entrepreneurial startups, the system-wide application of quality improvement science, governance and leadership consulting, and bedside clinical care delivery.

CurrentCare, an independent nonprofit, came about through a strong partnership with the State of Rhode Island and the statewide collaboration of our hospital/IDN, provider, insurer, consumer, and employer partners. It was clear to us that if we were truly committed to the health and wellbeing of the people of our state, we needed to find a way for their healthcare data to be available anytime and anywhere it is needed, regardless of proprietary, geographic, and/or payer boundaries. As time passed and we observed others struggling with “data hoarding” challenges, we realized the power of keeping our eye on the “north star”— that is, what is best for the people we serve. To paraphrase Don Berwick, MD, the former head of CMS, the enemy was disease, error, and waste – not each other.

The RI Dept. of Health received HIE grant funding from AHRQ in 2004, which resulted in the development of CurrentCare’s governance structure, privacy and security framework, technology infrastructure design, branding and communication strategies, engagement of stakeholders, etc. RIQI then received grant funding from the HITECH Act in the 2009 federal stimulus bill that allowed us to stand up the HIE technology infrastructure and get data flowing within nine months of the grant award. We now have more than 200 unique data flows into CurrentCare.

All RI acute care hospitals are connected, with the exception of the VA (coming soon). Approximately 90 percent of all lab results and medication histories flow into CurrentCare, and data flows in from ambulatory care practices across the state. We also include such clinical information as data from CCDs, EKG reports, radiology reports, telemedicine alerts, etc. We are the only statewide HIE in the nation that has integrated substance abuse and alcohol treatment information from 42-CFR Part 2 providers. We have bi-directional data flow with the Epic platforms of our two largest IDNs/ACOs in the state; Athena, Cerner, and Meditech platforms will soon follow. This bi-directional flow means that providers do not have to leave their EHR to access and download/consume data from CurrentCare. The bi-directional achievement prompted the CEO of our largest IDN to report that one of his most seasoned ED physicians declared CurrentCare “indispensible” to providing emergency care now that it was accessible within his Epic system.

Our community is highly interested in leveraging the statewide HIE’s Provider Directory that we’re building. They support creating a statewide Provider Directory function in the center using multiple data feeds, creating a “single source of truth” for the provider information now critical to succeeding under new payment models. Healthcare stakeholders can purchase the data flow, allowing them to stop expending precious resources on duplicative provider directories that are expensive and very difficult to maintain. This is a very significant waste reduction opportunity for the RI healthcare community.

Since CurrentCare is the one place with the most comprehensive, longitudinal data from across many sites, irrespective of payment, we are committed to patient/consumer use of the database to manage their own health and that of their families. We are beta testing a consumer portal that will permit them to upload their own data from wearable technologies, and documents like Advance Directives/Powers of Attorney, etc. We are also building apps, such as the “My Meds” app, which allows a consumer to access their medication history data in CurrentCare from anywhere in the world. The portal also enables users to “view, download and transmit” their entire clinical record.

I haven’t even touched on the value to public health, quality reporting, shared analytics capability, etc., but you get the idea.

Why has the HIE faced such low numbers when it comes to physician adoption?
You may be referencing data quoted in a recent article in GoLocalProv, a RI publication. We were disappointed that neither RIQI nor any of our Board members were contacted for input into the article, as the usage representation was out of date and inaccurate. The survey referenced in the article is at least 15 months old, and it was conducted before we went live with bi-directional exchange with the Epic platforms of our two largest health systems in the state. Steve DeToy from the RI Medical Society — quoted in the GoLocalProv story — has been writing rebuttals/clarifications in several blogs and publications that picked up the story.

The measure of usage as reflected in the referenced survey from the State of RI is not only outdated, it includes a denominator of all licensed physicians in RI. RIQI focused the CurrentCare rollout effort on primary care and hasn’t even begun intensive roll out efforts beyond these providers. Therefore, the use of all licensed physicians as the denominator wasn’t accurate.

In addition, we don’t measure CurrentCare’s worth by just one measure of value. That would be as faulty as finding that a patient’s heart rate is in the normal range and concluding that they’re completely healthy on the basis of one metric. Health is more complicated than that and so is HIE. For example, the metric referenced doesn’t include use by other members of the care team, including PAs, NCM, quality improvement professionals, etc. It also doesn’t include our Hospital Alerts service usage. An analysis of the effect of CurrentCare Hospital Alerts over more than a year shows that they correlate with a 13-percent reduction in costly hospital readmissions within 30 days, and a 20-percent reduction in return visits to the emergency department within 30 days.

This metric also doesn’t regard the benefit to the research community. We are included in a number of research grant proposals because of the highly unique database of clinical information, including that from private practices. The research value to the RI community will grow exponentially over time.

The metric referenced doesn’t reflect the value of such services and tools as the NCM dashboard, which prompted the CEO of a very well respected and high-profile community health center to suggest that this was “a game-changer.” He quoted his staff’s reaction to it as, “The best data ever!”

So, in short, it is a disservice to the hundreds of people who are working hard on the community asset that is CurrentCare to characterize it as the article did. With all of the additional value cited above, we’ve just begun to leverage our community investment in CurrentCare. To disparage it now is like disparaging a nine-month old baby, expressing disappointment because this baby was expected to be able to run, jump, and play Little League, and all it’s doing at the moment is crawling around on all fours.

How is CurrentCare working to help physicians better leverage the HIE?
We are aware that physician adoption of health IT hasn’t been easy by anyone’s estimation. Despite their obvious value, CMS had to create a very robust incentive for physician adoption and use of EHRs. More than $100 million has been invested by CMS and RI Medicaid to incent RI physicians to adopt and meaningfully use EHRs. There have been virtually no incentives available to RI physicians to adopt and use CurrentCare. We also know that the value of an HIE is directly correlated with the evolution of the payment model. We knew when we began building CurrentCare that gaining adoption and use would be significantly hampered by RI’s nearly 100-percent fee-for-service model for many years into the future. The toxicity of the fee-for-service payment model meant that reducing duplication and better coordinating care resulted in financial penalties for providers. Now that we are finally seeing very encouraging movement of the prevailing payment model in RI toward payment for value, the benefit to ACOs/IDNs/hospitals/physician providers increases exponentially.

But we’re not relying exclusively on the payment system to increase adoption and use. We are executing a multi-pronged strategy to make CurrentCare indispensable. That strategy includes:

  • Growing the data types and data sharing partners, which creates more value in the eyes of providers, public health officials, researchers, consumers, etc.
  • Continually improving the design of the system in regard to ease of use.
  • Working with our community partners to encourage CurrentCare usage through provider contracts and quality improvement incentives.
  • Developing increasingly useful tools and services such as the NCM dashboards and the Provider Directory.
  • Developing ROI metrics such as those for Hospital Alerts that offer evidence of the value of CurrentCare.
  • Developing deeper data and analytics capacity, such as overlaying predictive analytics capabilities on top of our unique and much more comprehensive database, assisting providers to avoid preventable hospitalizations and ED visits.
  • Creating innovative tools and services for consumers; for example, if we can alert a provider to an ED admit, then with a patient’s consent, we can certainly alert the family member(s) of his/her choosing, should an event of that type occur, regardless of where the family member(s) resides geographically.

As I mentioned before, we’re really just getting started in putting this asset to work. There is much more to come.

How do physician adoption numbers reflect overall physician adoption of EHRs in Rhode Island?
Physician adoption of HIE services is not necessarily related to overall adoption of EHRs. In fact, EHR adoption in Rhode Island has been very robust. Of the approximate 1,200 primary care providers who have worked with RIQI, most have adopted an EHR, 1,159 are able to produce e-prescribing and quality reports, and 876 (over 70 percent) have met Stage 1 Meaningful Use. And this accomplishment did not happen overnight but took more than five years of education, training, and direct technical assistance – not to mention nearly $100 million in federal incentives, as well!

The usability of EHRs has been the subject of much Congressional debate in recent weeks. What feedback have you heard regarding usability from the state’s physicians?
The feedback from our physicians does not differ substantially from that reported to Congress in the recent testimony in front of the Senate HELP committee. This includes the need for:

  • Better usability for aggregating and viewing complete, accurate patient data at the point of care, including data from external sources, which will also improve the accuracy and lessen the burden of data collection;
  • Smart approaches to structure free-form input (keyboard or voice) is essential to improve usability and to improve downstream data consumption and analytics;
  • Ease of interoperability with HIEs and other external data sources— in other words, avoiding the charging of substantial fees for connecting and exchanging data, which we have seen happen in RI (this one is critical!);
  • Built-in safety features that help avert errors and adverse events (auto checks for drug-drug, drug-allergy interactions, etc. with careful attention to having the RIGHT amount of reminders so they aren’t ignored);
  • Clear training tools/assistance to ensure the above functionality is enabled, including an increase in training time since improving quality is often the responsibility of support staff (currently, on average there is only a one-week training period and any additional time comes at a cost. Increase to at least 2 weeks); have the EHRs clearly notify staff within the workflow when they aren’t meeting a quality measure (i.e., turn the field red or a notifications shows when a required procedure is missing, etc. Some EHRs do this, but many others do not).

How does CurrentCare plan to evolve over the next several years? Are there plans for self-sustainability?
CurrentCare does not now depend upon public funding for the majority of its revenue, but it is significant and could become the major source if anticipated grants/contracts come through in 2015. The plan is for CurrentCare to continue to expand its ability to serve as a “public utility” type of asset used by state government, consumers, researchers, providers, payers, policy makers, etc., as well as a provider of customized fee-for-service products and services to hospitals/ACOs/providers, payers, entrepreneurs/investors and other stakeholders. While RIQI doesn’t anticipate dependency on grants, it is definitely a center of innovation capable of attracting and effectively using grant funding to develop valuable and creative new products and services based on the needs of its stakeholders. With very broad stakeholder engagement, it can attract entrepreneurs with a need to test and evaluate innovative ideas that involve some type of assistance from health information technology.

Do you have any final thoughts?
I’ve always felt that my time at RIQI was the best work of my life and worth every life-moment that I invested in it. But its true worth hit me hard when I was diagnosed with breast cancer and began to see the need for initiatives like CurrentCare through the eyes of someone whose life literally depended upon the healthcare system. From the morning after my diagnosis, when I found that I’d cried myself awake yet had to scramble to assemble and transport my own health records, through the surgery when my last panicked thought before anesthesia was that my doctors and nurses didn’t have access to my advance directive, to the gaps in follow-up care that left me feeling frightened and alone … I knew I was being given the rare gift of understanding the true value of my own work. One can perhaps then understand why I’m a staunch defender of HIEs, regardless of where they are on their developmental trajectory.


Contacts

JenniferMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg, Lt. Dan

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

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News 7/13/15

July 13, 2015 News 1 Comment

Top News

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The House passes the 21st Century Cures Act in a 344-77 vote. Though the bipartisan bill has gained the support of hundreds of health groups, it has yet to fully win the hearts and minds of the AMA, which has expressed continued discontent with its interoperability section, which “would refocus national efforts on making systems interoperable and holding individuals responsible for blocking or otherwise inhibiting the flow of patient information throughout our healthcare system.”


Webinars

July 14 (Tuesday) noon ET. “What Health Care Can Learn from Silicon Valley.” Sponsored by Athenahealth. Presenter: Ed Park, EVP/COO, Athenahealth. Ed will discuss how an open business structure and strong customer focus have helped fuel success among the most prominent tech companies and what health care can learn from their strategies.

July 22 (Wednesday) 1:00 ET. “Achieve Your Quality Objectives Before 2018.” Sponsored by CitiusTech. Presenters: Jeffrey Springer, VP of product management, CitiusTech; Dennis Swarup, VP of corporate development, CitiusTech. The presenters will address best practices for building and managing CQMs and reports, especially as their complexity increases over time. They will also cover quality improvement initiatives that can help healthcare systems simplify their journey to value-based care. The webinar will conclude with an overview of how CitiusTech’s hosted BI-Clinical analytics platform, which supports over 600 regulatory and disease-specific CQMs, supports clients in their CQM strategies.

Previous webinars are on the YouTube channel. Contact Lorre for webinar services including discounts for signing up by July 31.


Tweet Chat

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Don’t miss the next #HIStalking tweet chat on July 16 at 1pm ET. Dave Chase (@chasedave) and Leonard Kish (@leonardkish), co-authors of “95 Theses for a New Health Ecosystem,” will host. Check out discussion topics here.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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Greenway Health gives followers a sneak peek of its new brand.

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Forbes takes a look at the rising pay of primary care docs in the wake of an uptick in value-based payments and the tried-and-true law of supply and demand. While the percentage of medical grads electing family practice fell by half between 1997 and 2009, that number may soon be on a sluggish upswing thanks to the downstream financial gains primary care practices are now bringing to their health system overlords.


Announcements and Implementations

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Medfusion launches a new patient payment and revenue management solution. Medfusion Pay includes a mobile pre-check app and online bill pay for patients, and payment processing dashboard and POS terminal for physicians.

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NextGen connects to the state of Massachusetts’s three year-old Mass HIway HIE via its NextGen Share HISP solution. 

Online training company Relias Learning will offer ICD-10 educational courses from DecisionHealth via its Relias Learning Management System. The 70 courses are targeted to administrators, clinical staff, billers, and intake staff.


Telemedicine

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The City of Kansas City, MO partners with the Kansas City Health Care Trust, Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Kansas City, and Mosaic Life Care to install a telehealth kiosk for employees at City Hall. “It’s an excellent way to make it easier on employees when they have minor illnesses or injuries, notes City Councilman John Sharp. “Not only is it convenient, but it is also affordable, with no copays or deductibles. Employees do not have to pay a thing to receive care.”


People

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KaZee promotes Michael “Mickey” Bourdeau to CEO. Former CEO and company founder Albert Woodard will become chairman of the board. 


Research and Innovation

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An AMA study finds that over 60 percent of physicians still work in small practices of 10 or fewer physicians, and that practice size did not change much between 2012 and 2014, despite healthcare delivery reforms. Other nuggets from the study include: physician practice ownership decreased from 53.2 percent to 50.8 percent, while hospital ownership of practices increased from 23.4 percent to 25.6 percent. Solo physician practices decreased from 18.4 percent to 17.1 percent.


Other

Houston-based cardiologist and Texas Medical Association President Tom Garcia, MD makes no bones about his lack of love for ICD-10, emphasizing the burden it will place on the 60-70 percent of TMA members that have not yet adopted EHRs. He also notes that some physicians believe it’s an attempt by large corporations with strong lobbying clout to get access to patient information to obtain and then sell it. “These people are salivating to get this data,” he says, “so they can mine this data to determine what is the best way to make money off the relationship between the doctor and the patient.”


Contacts

JenniferMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg, Lt. Dan

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

Get HIStalk Practice  updates.
Contact us online.
Become a sponsor.

JennHIStalk

Democratizing Health Data – #HIStalking Tweet Chat Thursday, July 16 at 1pm ET

July 13, 2015 News No Comments

Join Dave Chase (@chasedave) and Leonard Kish (@leonardkish), co-authors of “95 Theses for a New Health Ecosystem,” plus @JennHIStalk on Thursday, July 16 at 1pm ET for a lively #HIStalking chat about the ways in which healthcare will reach its fullest potential with new incentives and the democratization of health information. Dave and Leonard have based their discussion topics on four of their theses, plus thrown in a fifth for good measure:

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#HIStalking Discussion Questions

Thesis #2
"Open source, open APIs, and open knowledge (such as wikis) will become central to defining a common architecture to support this new science. These are modern versions of peer-review."
Q1: Interoperability is relatively easy with more open frameworks. Beyond Meaningful Use, how do we create the will for more open frameworks?

Thesis #8
"Open access to information will enable individuals to make the best decisions and become well-informed individuals, particularly when curated and contextualized by clinicians."
Q2: How do we enable better curated data for individuals? Will physician jobs shift to become trusted curators?

Thesis #73
"The best care is and will be collaborative beyond the walls of any one institution. Just as “the smartest people work for someone else,” the smartest providers practice outside of this clinic and this hospital. The smartest provider may, in fact, be a collective, or the crowd. New ways to open communications will drive better care."
Q3:  How do we provide more open communications beyond interoperability? Can current EHRs become communication tools?

Thesis #85.
Customers will, in effect, “self-deny” their own claims. A new metric for success is the “Negaclaim” — an unnecessary claim avoided. This isn’t about denying care. Just as energy consumers aren’t interested in kilowatt hours, individuals aren’t interested in health claims. They want health restored and diseases prevented.
Q4: What is the role of today’s EHR in a future without traditional claims for payment. Can they adapt?

We’ll finish up with a more general question about how to create a more open world and virtuous cycle where everyone’s small data can become part of societal big data, and how we incentivize this cycle and manage the process.
Q5: To get to a data-driven, precision health, and precision medicine future, how do we create a virtuous circle between individual data, "a Google Map of me" and big data?


Tweet Chat Instructions

It’s easy to join the Twitter conversation by logging into TweetChat, which automatically keeps you in the conversation by tagging all tweets with the #HIStalking hash tag. If you are unable to access the TweetChat room, simply search in Twitter for #HIStalking and follow the conversation. To contribute, be sure and tag your tweets with #HIStalking so they can be seen by other chat participants.


Contacts

JenniferMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg, Lt. Dan

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

Get HIStalk Practice  updates.
Contact us online.
Become a sponsor.

JennHIStalk

Population Health Management Weekly Wrap Up 7/10/15

July 10, 2015 News No Comments

Top News

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The Minnesota Dept. of Human Services selects data management, analysis, and data access and reporting resources from 3M Health Information Systems to support its Integrated Health Partnership initiative, which serves 204,000 residents on Medical Assistance. The new tools will help the partnership’s 16 healthcare organizations analyze cost of care, service utilization, and risk data to better identify cost savings and care transformation opportunities.


Webinars

July 14 (Tuesday) noon ET. “What Health Care Can Learn from Silicon Valley.” Sponsored by Athenahealth. Presenter: Ed Park, EVP/COO, Athenahealth. Ed will discuss how an open business structure and strong customer focus have helped fuel success among the most prominent tech companies and what health care can learn from their strategies.

July 22 (Wednesday) 1:00 ET. “Achieve Your Quality Objectives Before 2018.” Sponsored by CitiusTech. Presenters: Jeffrey Springer, VP of product management, CitiusTech; Dennis Swarup, VP of corporate development, CitiusTech. The presenters will address best practices for building and managing CQMs and reports, especially as their complexity increases over time. They will also cover quality improvement initiatives that can help healthcare systems simplify their journey to value-based care. The webinar will conclude with an overview of how CitiusTech’s hosted BI-Clinical analytics platform, which supports over 600 regulatory and disease-specific CQMs, supports clients in their CQM strategies.

Previous webinars are on the YouTube channel. Contact Lorre for webinar services including discounts for signing up by July 31.


Tweet Chat

image image

Don’t miss the next #HIStalking tweet chat on July 16 at 1pm ET. Dave Chase (@chasedave) and Leonard Kish (@leonardkish), co-authors of “95 Theses for a New Health Ecosystem,” will host. Stay tuned for discussion topics.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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PM and population health technology company Privia Health partners with Shenandoah Independent Practice Association (VA) to manage its population health activities, including management of its 400-provider ACO. In addition, Privia’s Quality Network will become the exclusive contracting entity for all of SIPA’s performance-based arrangements and clinical integration initiatives.

Florida Blue’s GuideWell division partners with population health management tech company Alignment Healthcare to launch primary care clinics for seniors beginning in January 2016.


Announcements and Implementations

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VisiQuate launches Team Performance Analytics, Missing Charges Analytics, and the Flo 2.0 advanced operational business intelligence and workflow engine.

RCM solutions company PMMC adds a benchmarking module to its Online Analytics market analysis tool. The new module will give users access to portions of the CMS Standard Analytics File that have been formatted around bundling and population health initiatives.

Sogeti USA launches the Data Driven Decisions for Healthcare platform incorporating analytics and interface tools from Microsoft and HP. The new solution, which targets providers caring for chronic and complex patients, is the first in a series of similar products for multiple verticals.

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Indiana Regional Medical Center selects Aegis Health Group to help improve its population health management programs. Aegis will help IRMC implement its OneCommunity website, which allows users to track health and wellness activities, and employers to anticipate worker health needs and hospital services.

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Summa Health (OH) chooses Merge Healthcare’s cardiology and hemodynamic solutions to support its population health and wellness initiatives.

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Cerner and University of Missouri extend their healthcare collaboration, which includes the Tiger Institute for Health Innovation, for another 10 years. They will add the Tiger Institute Leadership Academy to host industry peers and place new emphasis on mobile healthcare and population health.

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Florida-based PremierMD ACO selects the eClinicalWorks CCMR population health platform to help it evaluate population health and quality improvement initiatives, and advance its ACO objectives. PremierMD has also named eCW as its preferred EHR solution.


Government and Politics

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President Obama nominates Andrew Slavitt as the next CMS administrator, a position he has held on an interim basis since Marilyn Tavenner stepped down in February.


People

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Arcadia Healthcare Solutions names Richard Parker, MD (Beth Israel Deaconess Care Organization) as chief medical officer.

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Vanderbilt University Hospital promotes Mitchell Edgeworth to CEO of Vanderbilt University Adult Hospital and Clinics. He succeeds David Posch, who has been named to the newly created position of associate vice chancellor for population health.


Research and Innovation

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A California Healthline report highlights Way to Wellville,  a year-old health technology project run by technology investor Esther Dyson that will try to address the public health problems in a rural California county and four other US locations. They’re using IBM Watson to target more Medicaid signups and hope to use iPhone collaboration and Fitbit monitoring. The county’s public health officer seems skeptical in how Silicon Valley types can parachute in and change the county’s culture.


Sponsor Updates

  • GE Healthcare partners with the NBA to promote orthopedic and sports medicine research.
  • Medicomp Systems offers “Addiction vs. Innovation.”
  • Nordic offers the latest episode of its “Making the Cut” video series on Epic conversion planning.

Contacts

JenniferMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg, Lt. Dan

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

Get HIStalk Practice  updates.
Contact us online.
Become a sponsor.

JennHIStalk

News 7/9/15

July 9, 2015 News No Comments

Top News

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CMS releases its proposed Physician Fee Schedule for 2016, its first since the repeal of the Sustainable Growth Rate through the Medicare Access and CHIP Reauthorization Act of 2015. At 800-plus pages, the draft contains a number of items relating to healthcare IT, including:

  • Potential expansion of Medicare’s comprehensive primary care initiative, which is intended to boost primary care with technology, and to reward physicians more with value-based payments.
  • The ability of rural health clinics and qualified health centers to use the new chronic care management code, provided they use current, certified EHRs and are available to patients via secure messaging.
  • Payment for some in-home telemedicine services related to end-stage renal disease counseling, and unique cases of prolonged observation.

Webinars

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July 14 (Tuesday) noon ET. “What Health Care Can Learn from Silicon Valley.” Sponsored by Athenahealth. Presenter: Ed Park, EVP/COO, Athenahealth. Ed will discuss how an open business structure and strong customer focus have helped fuel success among the most prominent tech companies and what health care can learn from their strategies.

July 22 (Wednesday) 1:00 ET. “Achieve Your Quality Objectives Before 2018.” Sponsored by CitiusTech. Presenters: Jeffrey Springer, VP of product management, CitiusTech; Dennis Swarup, VP of corporate development, CitiusTech. The presenters will address best practices for building and managing CQMs and reports, especially as their complexity increases over time. They will also cover quality improvement initiatives that can help healthcare systems simplify their journey to value-based care. The webinar will conclude with an overview of how CitiusTech’s hosted BI-Clinical analytics platform, which supports over 600 regulatory and disease-specific CQMs, supports clients in their CQM strategies.

Previous webinars are on the YouTube channel. Contact Lorre for webinar services including discounts for signing up by July 31.


Tweet Chat

image image

Don’t miss the next #HIStalking tweet chat on July 16 at 1pm ET. Dave Chase (@chasedave) and Leonard Kish (@leonardkish), co-authors of “95 Theses for a New Health Ecosystem,” will host. Stay tuned for discussion topics.


Announcements and Implementations

image

OU Physicians, Oklahoma’s largest physicians group, posts patient satisfaction survey rates on its website in an effort to promote transparency and accountability. “We’re proud of the care we deliver and we want patients to see what their peers are saying about our providers, whether that feedback is positive or negative,” explains CEO Brian Maddy.

Triarq Health will integrate TransFirst’s electronic payment processing technology into its gloStream EHR.


Telemedicine

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Mississippi Governor Phil Bryant officially welcomes TelehealthOne, the state’s first and only telemedicine business, to Madison County during a ribbon-cutting ceremony. The company, which helped local Mosby’s drug store become the first private pharmacy to offer telemedicine services, anticipates creating 40 jobs over the next 12 months.

Fruit Street Health receives an undisclosed amount of seed funding from unnamed physicians and angel investors, bringing its total funding to $1.7 million since it launched just over a year ago. The company made news earlier this summer when it partnered with Validic to integrate data from 175 wearable devices and apps into its telehealth and wellness software.


People

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Bert Miuccio (Transport for Christ) joins HealthTeamWorks as CEO. Former CEO Marjie Harbrecht, MD has taken on the role of chief medical and innovation officer.

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Harbin Clinic (GA) promotes Marc Dean, MD to assistant medical director of clinical informatics; and Kelly Mayfield, MD to assistant director of medical malpractice, risk management & compliance.


Government and Politics

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The White House voices its approval of the 21st Century Cures Act bill making its way through Congress, specifically pointing out the roll its Precision Medicine Initiative will play in advancing care. The administration subtly adds that the initiative’s success will “require enabling patients to access their data and accelerating interoperability between electronic health records.”


Research and Innovation

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Harvard researchers put 23 online symptom checkers to the test, finding that the different software algorithms listed the correct diagnosis first in 34 percent of cases, and provided accurate triage advice in 58 percent of cases. Researchers also found that tools with the most accurate diagnoses (Isabel, iTriage, Mayo Clinic, and Symcat) were not among those that did the best job of recommending appropriate levels of care.


Other

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ESPN reporter Adam Schefter tweets images of NFL player Jason Pierre-Paul’s medical records alongside the news he had his right finger amputated, prompting cries of HIPAA violations from patient privacy watchdogs. Sports Illustrated legal analyst Michael McCann quickly tweeted in, noting that an employee of Jackson Memorial Hospital – not ESPN – would likely face the HIPAA police.


Contacts

JenniferMr. H, Lorre, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg, Lt. Dan

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

Get HIStalk Practice  updates.
Contact us online.
Become a sponsor.

JennHIStalk

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