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Population Health Management Weekly Wrap Up 7/31/16

July 31, 2016 News Comments Off on Population Health Management Weekly Wrap Up 7/31/16

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Dorothy Fisher, MD (Sentara Quality Care Network) joins Forward Health Group as chief clinical officer.

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Mihir Shah (Unitek Information Systems) joins Apollo Medical Holdings as CFO. In related news, California-based APCN ACO and Allied Physicians ACO select the company’s population health management services. The MSSP ACOs care for a combined 16,000 Medicare beneficiaries.

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Chicago-based predictive analytics and employee engagement company Evive Health will double its office space to 16,000 square feet in August. The company anticipates immediately adding several new staff roles, and expanding to 70 employees by the end of the year.

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Covenant Health (TN) chooses Cerner’s clinical, financial, and population health management systems.

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Consumer health site Sharecare, founded in 2010 by Dr. Oz and WebMD founder Jeff Arnold, acquires the population health business of publicly traded Healthways. The business and its 1,700 employees will remain in Franklin, TN. Healthways announced in 2015 that it was exploring strategic alternatives.

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Healthstar Physicians (TN) selects population health management services from Transcend to help it better care for Medicare Advantage patients across 14 locations in Knoxville.

The County of Renfrew Paramedic Services in Ontario implements the Philips Tailored Ambulatory Care Program to remotely monitor elderly patients from the home and reduce readmissions. The program includes fall-predicting wearables and tablets for patients, and corresponding monitoring an analytics software for physicians.


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

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News 7/28/16

July 28, 2016 News Comments Off on News 7/28/16

Top News

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Medstreaming acquires Physician Billing Partners for an undisclosed sum. The Redmond, WA-based company, which acquired registry software vendor M2S in March, will incorporate PBP’s RCM and PM services into its ambulatory software for cardiologists and radiologists.


Webinars

August 10 (Wednesday) 1:30 ET. “Taming the Beast: CDS Knowledge Management.” Sponsored by LogicStream Health. Presenters: Luis Saldana, MD, MBA, CMIO, Texas Health Resources (THR); Maxine Ketchum, clinical decision support analyst, THR; Kanan Garg, senior applications analyst, THR; Patrick Yoder, CEO, LogicStream health. This presentation will review THR’s systematic process for managing clinical decision support assets, including identifying broken alerts, addressing technical and clinical issues, modifying order sets, and retiring tools that have outlived their usefulness. Attendees will learn how THR uses a robust knowledge management platform to better understand how clinicians are interacting with their clinical content to maintain their order sets and reduce the number of alerts fired.

Contact Lorre for webinar services. Past webinars are on our HIStalk webinars YouTube channel.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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Constellation will sell its health IT consulting business to JDL Technologies. Terms of the deal, expected to close in October, were not made public. Constellation’s MMIC business employs 30 in Minneapolis, all of which will be retained by JDL as it works to increase its healthcare HIPAA compliance and cybersecurity business in the Midwest.


Announcements and Implementations

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Boston-based EveryPatient develops a set of patient satisfaction tools including real-time collection and automatic analysis of experience data, as well as corresponding provider alerts.

CRM vendor Silverline develops patient contact center software based on Salesforce’s Fullforce technology.

Inovalon signs a multiyear EHR data integration agreement with Athenahealth, linking users of AthenaClinicals to its analytics technology.

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Community Care Collaborative implements the Bridge Patient Portal across its partner safety net organizations in Travis County, TX, including 24 CommUnityCare health centers. 

MedEvolve adds InstaMed’s patient payment tools to its EHR, PM, and RCM software and services for specialty practices.

EHR vendor Medent will process its customer data through Patient IP’s matching software to help end users identity patients that may be eligible for clinical trials.

NextGen reseller TSI Healthcare adds patient intake kiosks from OTech Group to its service line.

Atlanta-based HealthAsyst adds payment processing options from Vantiv Integrated Payments to its patient check-in software.


People

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Mike Hairston (Greenway Health) joins Across Healthcare as principal.

Douglas Berkson (Berkson Consulting) joins Accretive Health as senior vice president.


Government and Politics

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ONC updates its Health IT Dashboard with the latest count of MU-attesting EPs by ambulatory vendor (of which there are nearly 600). Epic, Allscripts, and EClinicalWorks take the top spots.


Research and Innovation

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A study of 321 type 2 diabetics in the UK finds that self-monitoring of blood glucose levels isn’t as effective as telemonitoring in improving glycemic control, contradicting previous studies. Patients that measured and transmitted their glucose readings to a secure website for review by a family physician achieved greater control of their levels, including blood pressure, with little change to physician workload.


Contacts

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

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

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JennHIStalk

HIStalk Practice Interviews Jon Freshman, CTO, American Well

July 28, 2016 News Comments Off on HIStalk Practice Interviews Jon Freshman, CTO, American Well

Jon Freshman is CTO of American Well.

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Tell me about yourself and the organization.
I’ve been in the technology sector now for a little over 25 years. I started out on a bit of an unusual path to get into IT. I actually have a master’s degree in environmental science. I was an environmental consultant for a number of years at EPA Superfund sites, but my passion was always for IT. While I was doing environmental consulting, I decided to start up my own company pulling in EPA dockets, data, and providing that as as resource for really large companies that were under the regulations of Superfunds. Over the years, I decided to go back to school, got my master’s degree in computer science, and started out over the first course of my tenure doing development on different enterprise platforms.

I was involved with CAD and manufacturing software. I was in development for the financial sector, and even did a brief stint with a company doing direct campaign marketing. Finally, I began to transition over to a role more on the platform architecture side, and that’s when I joined American Well back in 2007. Today, I’m basically responsible for overseeing all of our technologies related to our platform, and our product development. I also have a focus on our strategic technology partnerships.

We have a pretty diverse set of teams here. We’ve got engineering teams that focus across lots of different functionality, including our Web portals, IOS and Android apps, kiosks, and even telemedicine tablets. While each of these teams focuses on a different vertical, they all tie into our core platform and functionality. In addition to our core development teams, we also have teams that focus on integration, such as tying into EHR systems, and HIE patient portals. We know that, as the demand for telehealth continues to grow, we also need to really focus on how integrative that experience is going to be. For us, the technology needs to be much more than a simple direct-to-consumer offering. It really needs to be something that ties into a much bigger experience, so some of those integrations that I mentioned are part of the much bigger ecosystem that we want to be integrated into.

We tend to focus a lot less on just adding a feature here, a little bit of functionality there, and more on how can we really move the needle for telehealth in supporting patients and physicians across a diverse set of use cases because we need to service employers, health plans, health systems, and retail. In many cases, there’s some overlap, but in other cases, there’s actually quite a bit of diversity in how people want to roll out telehealth.

Given your tenure in telemedicine, how have you seen interest in and acceptance of it change over the last several years?
There was a heavy emphasis on education during the first several years at American Well. What is telehealth? What are the benefits that it provides? What’s the ROI for different use cases? Even the video conferencing phone platform itself wasn’t necessarily as widespread as it is today. We’ve got technologies today like Apple FaceTime. That hadn’t been introduced into the consumer market yet, so there was a lot of curiosity about what telehealth was and how it worked. It was more of a focus on educating people than why we’re better than a competitor.

Over the last three or four years, we’ve seen a real shift in awareness, and more sophisticated understanding by employers, health plans, and health systems as to what telehealth is and what the ROI is. We don’t have to give that explanation any longer. A lot of these organizations now have very established programs in place for telehealth and distance care. We now typically start a conversation with one of our customers around how we’re going to weave that experience into their workflows and use cases. We invest a lot in partnering with our customers, on integrating it into their big picture; being able to exchange patient data, physician data, and clinical data in real time are key factors for us.

Another interesting area that we’ve gone into in terms of integration is the introduction of our mobile SDKs. We have IOS and Android SDKs that allow our customers to project telehealth services directly within their own mobile apps. We don’t even require our customer to white label a version of our app anymore. They can literally have, with the touch of a button, a fully embedded telehealth experience within their own patient portal or other proprietary app.

We’ve also really focused a lot of the efforts around technology to make it much easier for telehealth visits to have an expanded universe of people that we can draw into that experience. For instance, we’ve introduced multiway video into our platform, allowing people to pull in or invite remote caregivers or translators into a telehealth visit. We find these really have a big impact on both patient and physician acceptance, because now we’re not just extending the reach of an in-person visit – we’re actually unlocking things that weren’t necessarily even possible before with telehealth.

What barriers, if any, do you feel still need to be overcome in terms of achieving ubiquitous adoption of telemedicine services?
I think that payment is probably a key a factor – when, where, and how physicians are getting reimbursed. Also, ensuring that the reimbursement is on par with in-person care. We’ve certainly seen an improvement with this over time because, at the end of the day, everybody’s got a vested interest in reducing healthcare costs. Whether it’s legislation, or the payers, I think they all have some level of commitment to ensure that telehealth is a success, because the demand is there for it.

Typically, it’s not that providers aren’t convinced that they shouldn’t do some sort of telehealth or telemedicine offering. I think most organizations today really do recognize the need. I think what we hear more often is just how they actually want to operationalize that offering. They need to consider things like, do they want to offer up telehealth for just a segment, a specific population, or just for follow-up care? Are they going to offer it for acute care as well? Are they interested in an offering that includes things like wellness, and behavioral health programs? I think these are probably the things that organizations are really trying to figure out, and less so whether or not they want to move forward. I think at this point, telehealth has wide enough recognition and adoption that we don’t really see a lot of people out there questioning the value of it.

From a consumer perspective, I think we’ve certainly overcome a lot of the barriers that we’ve seen, let’s say earlier in the decade, because a lot of the things that were prohibitive for patients have really been addressed, such as improved bandwidth on cellular devices, cheaper mobile phones, and cheaper laptops. Again, consumers are really a lot more familiar now with the notion of doing video in general, so it’s becoming much more intuitive for them. The other thing is, as more and more health plans and employers are adding telehealth as a benefit, the ability for consumers to readily have access to it is becoming more and more attractive to them.

Have you been encouraged by the attention CMS has given telemedicine over the last several years? It seems like its making more of an effort to incorporate telemedicine more into value-based payment models.
We’re definitely encouraged by the move of CMS to move forward in the recognition of the value of telehealth. I know there are a few things that have been recently introduced in particular; there’s a new Next Generation ACO, and depending on whether or not the ACO can get a telehealth waiver to operate in a remote area, it can definitely allow for expanded payment options in telehealth.

With the introduction of MACRA, there’s also the opportunity for us to place more of an emphasis on outcomes in telehealth, because we think that telehealth is a great way to offer continued patient engagement and more patient-centered care.

Speaking of patient-centered care, mental health seems to be an increasingly important part of holistic or primary care. How is American Well addressing mental health needs?
Today, we have two psychology practices on AmWell. One is for adults, and the other is for adolescents. At the end of the month, we’re also going to launch a psychiatry practice as well. We feel like it’s a huge need, because in many cases, there’s just lack of access for mental health providers.

Our offering started up a couple of years ago. Our view is that telehealth certainly can deliver just as high-quality care as traditional, in-person care. Certainly from an access perspective, it’s just so much easier to fit into a patient’s busy lifestyle, and so much easier for patients to do things like self-scheduling. On our platform, patients can go in, select a time that might be convenient for them, and then go ahead and schedule a visit. They can also call in to an 800 number as well, or they can actually have someone schedule it on their behalf.

Having a lot of different options to make it easier for patients to get ready access to mental health is incredibly important. We’re in the process of expanding our provider network even further, because of highly anticipated demand going forward.

Given the proliferation of telemedicine companies over the last several years, do you think we’ll see a bubble that might eventually burst? How will vendors have to differentiate themselves?
I think the key for success is about having a diverse offering. That can be defined in many ways. I mentioned a number of them before; the ability to use IOS or Android devices, the ability to use a kiosk, or a Web portal.

It’s much more than that, too. It’s the ability for us to really offer a rich and diverse set of services that will be key for us. We recently announced our services exchange, for example, where the idea is that consumers can get access to basically the best brands of medicine in the US by allowing health systems to extend their network of positions; they can actually project them onto other enterprise platforms. Cleveland Clinic for example, and has a service exchange that it’s setting up with Anthem’s LiveHealth Online app. We’re going to expand this over the coming months. There’s a much more diverse ecosystem among all our enterprise customers for offering different types of telehealth services. That’s something that I think, for us, to answer your question around differentiation, is certainly going to be a key factor.

Do you have any final thoughts?
It’s been really rewarding to see telehealth evolve over the past decade. It’s great to see that we can offer up simple and affordable healthcare options through our technology. Some of the really interesting things on the technology side that I think will help further evolve and define telehealth are going to be found in the next wave of wearables, and some of the new connected medical devices that are coming out on the market. I think these are going to really allow us to unlock additional use cases, even more than where we are today.


Contacts

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

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

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

JennHIStalk

News 7/27/16

July 27, 2016 News Comments Off on News 7/27/16

Top News

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A report on state healthcare price transparency laws highlights the lack of progress most of the country has made thus far. Just three states – Colorado, Maine, and New Hampshire – received an A for providing detailed pricing on a range of procedures through easy-to-use public websites. Forty-three states received failing grades, including Delaware. Perhaps its new claims database will help it move up in the rankings next year.


Webinars

August 10 (Wednesday) 1:30 ET. “Taming the Beast: CDS Knowledge Management.” Sponsored by LogicStream Health. Presenters: Luis Saldana, MD, MBA, CMIO, Texas Health Resources (THR); Maxine Ketchum, clinical decision support analyst, THR; Kanan Garg, senior applications analyst, THR; Patrick Yoder, CEO, LogicStream health. This presentation will review THR’s systematic process for managing clinical decision support assets, including identifying broken alerts, addressing technical and clinical issues, modifying order sets, and retiring tools that have outlived their usefulness. Attendees will learn how THR uses a robust knowledge management platform to better understand how clinicians are interacting with their clinical content to maintain their order sets and reduce the number of alerts fired.

Contact Lorre for webinar services. Past webinars are on our HIStalk webinars YouTube channel.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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Jeffery Katz, MD takes to the local business paper to counter rumors that the Zoom+ chain of clinics in Portland and Seattle is imploding thanks to the departure of numerous executives – including himself – over the last year. Katz was hired in 2006 as the company’s first physician, but left last year to pursue a career as CMIO of Seward Health Care System in Boston. He returned to Zoom several months ago once he realized that the company was focused on building a “clinical provider platform to train providers around the world.”

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Chronic care management services startup Signallamp Health celebrates its move into 14,000 square-feet of office space in downtown Scranton, PA with an official ribbon-cutting. Founded last year, the company employs 15 and plans to create 69 full-time jobs within the next three years.

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Salt Lake City-based CHG Healthcare Services expands its Weatherby Healthcare physician staffing subsidiary with the addition of 33,664 square feet of office space at its current location in Fort Lauderdale, FL. The expansion is part of a $450,000 public incentives deal that will see CHG create at least 50 jobs with an average salary of just over $50,000. The company ultimately hopes to add up to 150 positions.

AristaMD closes an $11 million Series A round of financing led by Avalon Ventures, which it will use to further develop its e-consult and intelligent referral software for PCPs and specialists.


People

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The American Osteopathic Association elects Boyd Buser, DO (Kentucky College of Osteopathic Medicine) president.


Announcements and Implementations

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Modernizing Medicine adds PM, telemedicine, lab integrations, and pathology features to its specialty-specific EHR software.

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Fichte, Endl & Elmer Eyecare (NY) implements CompuLink’s Ophthalmology Advantage EHR, PM, and ambulatory surgery center technology to manage its two clinics and surgery center.


Telemedicine

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Orlando, FL-based startup Mend VIP secures an undisclosed amount of funding from The Florida Institute for the Commercialization of Public Research. The two year-old company, which developed its digital scheduling, telemedicine, and secure messaging technology at the University of Central Florida, will work with the institute to further commercialize its services as it transitions out of UCF.


Government and Politics

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Delaware Governor Jack Markell signs off on a statewide healthcare claims database five years in the making. The Delaware Health Information Network will manage the new database, which Markell hopes will help public servants and citizens more accurately track healthcare costs.


Other

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Athens Orthopedic Clinic (GA) alerts patients of a data breach that occurred at the end of June thanks to its refusal to meet The Dark Overlord’s ransomware demands. The clinic believes the hacker gained access to its EHR using the log-in credentials of a third-party vendor. TDO (whose tweet stream is now defunct) made news earlier this month for targeting PilotFish Technology and SRS EHR clients.


Contacts

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

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

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

JennHIStalk

HIStalk Practice Interviews Richard Loomis, MD CMO & VP of Informatics, Practice Fusion

July 26, 2016 News 1 Comment

Richard Loomis, MD is CMO and vice president of informatics at Practice Fusion.

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Tell me about yourself and the organization.
I am a physician by training, trained in anesthesiology with further training in biomedical informatics. Before joining Practice Fusion, I led informatics for the Southern California region of Kaiser Permanente. I joined Practice Fusion three years ago, ultimately becoming chief medical officer. In that role, I oversee both healthcare informatics as well as medical affairs. I also have had the pleasure of being a participant in the HIMSS EHR Association, more recently as a member of the executive committee. My vice-chair position started July 1st. I’m really looking forward to working with the association’s chair, Sasha TerMaat of Epic, the other members of the EC, as well as our work groups to advance the collective goals and objectives of the association and our member companies.

How do you and your colleagues plan on steering EHRA decision-making in the coming year, especially with regard to interoperability?
We have been very active on the interoperability front. We view interoperability and advancing interoperability as key goals over the next year and beyond. We released a fact sheet last month as part of a congressional staff briefing – that’s one example of how we are working to educate the broader community around interoperability. A couple of areas of specific focus for the coming year include interoperability standards. While they are evolving and maturing, they’ve certainly been a challenge historically. We’re enthusiastic about some of the progress that we have been making on the standards front, but there is still work to be done. The other area of focus is governance; specifically, helping provider organizations work with regulatory bodies and EHR vendors on the governance and policies around health information exchange and clinical data exchange. Those are two key areas of focus.

Generally speaking, we see the shift to various forms of value-based payment models as the most significant driver to advancing interoperability. It aligns the interests of Practice Fusion customers and their patients, and emphasizes their need to exchange data to help deliver higher quality care at lower costs.

Putting your Practice Fusion hat back on, what are your customers’ biggest interoperability challenges at the moment? Do they revolve more around technology or workplace culture?
I feel that we’ve been very successful in facilitating interoperability for our customers. We have over 600 connected partners, including labs, imaging centers, and roughly 70,000 pharmacies via Surescripts, along with billing partners and other partners in the industry. We have been very successful in enabling small practices to exchange data with other healthcare services in their community to help them deliver high-quality care for their patients.  As I mentioned earlier, we are seeing a shift in payment models that really presents the need for providers in all clinical settings to exchange clinical data, and we are responding to that as part of the 2015 certification that EHRs must achieve to participate in the third stage of Meaningful Use as well as in various programs associated with MACRA.

At the same time, it’s worth noting that, while interoperability is important to our customers, it’s just one of many regulations they’re trying to keep track of at the moment. Our customers are overwhelmed with the changes they’re seeing. It’s certainly a challenge for them to keep up with the steady stream of regulations that impact how they run their practices and how they treat their patients.

Recent Deloitte survey findings show that physicians aren’t as aware of MACRA as they probably should be – only 50 percent of those surveyed had heard of it and only 32 percent say they’ve heard of it but don’t actually know what it is. Where do you think this lack of awareness stems from?
The survey results are certainly consistent with what I’m seeing in our customer base. Providers are simply trying to keep up with all of this change, and, as such, many are not aware of the significant impact that recent legislation, specifically MACRA, will have on them. EHR vendors are often a primary line of communication for delivering information about regulatory change. We feel that in order to enable our practices to effectively use our software, we need to play a role in education and it just so happens that we are in a unique position to do so. On a side note, I think the recent announcement from CMS of additional funding to help small practices meet the changes required as part of MACRA is evidence that they recognize that it is going to be difficult and challenging for these smaller practices to make the transition.

Do you have any final thoughts?
I’d like to emphasize that we would like to partner with others in the industry, including CMS and other agencies, to help educate providers, particularly on the small practice end of the spectrum. We’re committed to helping physicians meet the challenges of MACRA as they unfold.


Contacts

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

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

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

JennHIStalk

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