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From the Consultant’s Corner 11/5/15

November 5, 2015 News 3 Comments

The Competitive Advantage: IT and Operations Building a Shared EHR Vision

Many healthcare organizations task IT departments with a narrow focus: Keep hardware technology current, software competencies high, and downtime to a minimum. Meanwhile, financial and clinical operations run the business of providing healthcare. Under these directives, IT and operations behave as separate entities managing distinct visions, budgets, and priorities.

Today, this business-as-usual approach simply doesn’t foster collaboration and innovation. With high capital costs for enterprise systems, federal program changes, and market consolidation, staying competitive demands an interdependence between IT and operations unlike never before. In fact, 66 percent of CIOs note that EHR optimization is a critical area of focus for their health systems.

It goes without saying that technology solutions are no longer just enablers. Decisions made by IT stakeholders can impact — either positively or negatively — nearly every operations function. Executing almost any healthcare transformation initiative needs a shared vision, mutual governance and prioritization, and long-term optimization.

From budgeting and scoping upgrades, to usability and adoption, important process changes can establish a collaborative culture that leads to IT and operations becoming solution partners. Here are four best practices that help to create a new marriage:

1) Best practice: Establish a harmonious governance
Appoint co-chairs for steering committees, and require pre-work. However regular clinical, financial, consumer, and business governance meetings may be, seldom do we require a pre-meeting between Ops and IT co-chairs before each session. When co-chairs pre-meet, review proposals, and coach presenters together, the time in governance is spent on solution adjustment, less so solution debate. This approach drives faster decision making, more refined solutions, and more pleased leadership.

Having co-chairs requires collaboration before meetings and permits equal accountability for creativity and solution generation. For example, if operations is working to change the provider reimbursement model, IT can generate RVU reporting capabilities and provide a corresponding solution for the business needs. Too often today, we don’t do our homework together.

2) Best practice: Create true FTE liaisons
Liaisons are a secret sauce for EHR optimization and ongoing collaboration. Liaisons assigned as a half or full FTE function as eyes and ears on the units, in the medical offices, business offices, and more. They know who is frustrated, what’s broken, what workarounds persist, and who is succeeding and innovating. Liaisons ideally have operations and IT backgrounds, and are very comfortable shadowing, listening, training, and becoming a trusted peer to users. They play a key role in educating decision-makers about culture, readiness, and support for change.

Clinicians, former billing office managers, and ancillary staff all make good liaisons. They can be budgeted by IT and operations to share accountability, and can split time between IT work and extra hands on the floor.

3) Best practice: Internally market your initiatives
From the C-suite to individual work teams, explaining what, how, and why decisions are made — and marketing the rationale behind new initiatives — is key to achieving organizational alignment and buy-in. Governance teams should share this information on intranets, at medical executive committees, in nurse manager meetings, at lunch sessions, and more. Transparent decision making drives earlier reaction, timely feedback, and a sense of inclusiveness that retains talent and prevents isolation.

For key decisions, mature organizations circulate a one-page memo (perhaps about the future of device integration) that includes the names of decision committee members, a summary of the discussion, and the challenges and decisions that help all stakeholders become a part of the conversation.

EHR Champions have the responsibility of working with the communications team to market priorities collaboratively and secure support.

4) Best practice: Make optimization a “forever” plan
Business optimization must become a "forever" effort. There is debate in the community around establishing dedicated optimization teams. Whether a distinct team or one with matrixed responsibility, prioritizing together with PMO support, communicating to the organization, and delivering continuously relevant optimization is key to the health of the business.

Aligning and re-aligning transparent drivers such as patient engagement, user personalization, system replacement, KPI reporting, and more to specific initiatives and departments should be a continuous exercise.

Aligning visions benefits all stakeholders
Aligning the corporate vision accrues benefits from governance to work team execution. The healthcare enterprise can — and must — evolve more quickly to keep a competitive advantage and improve quality. Building the web of trust requires strengthening connections from the patient to the user to the CFO, and transparency is key.

Achieving such a shared vision enables faster adoption of solutions. Innovation allows organizations to attract and retain talent, improve clinical productivity and enhance reimbursement potential — all of which can lead to a better position in the marketplace. Although creating a competitive advantage through alignment is challenging, organizations that consistently follow best practices can ensure steady progress, happier users and healthier patients.

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Jaffer Traish is the Epic Practice Director at Culbert Healthcare Solutions.


Contacts

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

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News 11/4/15

November 4, 2015 News Comments Off on News 11/4/15

Top News

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The State Health Information Network for New York (SHIN-NY) connects all eight RHIOs across the state, a milestone funded by $100 million in taxpayer money over the last several years. While the achievement is significant, the state and managing New York EHealth Collaborative aren’t resting on their laurels. They are now focusing on connecting physician practices to the HIE, a challenging endeavor given the capital investment and boots-on-the ground training required. While over 80 percent of FQHCs and hospitals in the state now participate, just 12 percent of physician practices are connected.


HIStalk Practice Announcements and Requests

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My fifth trip to the Health IT Leadership Summit in Atlanta was highlighted by the morning’s first panel, which featured reps from Epic, Cerner, RelayHealth, and Greenway. It’s the first time I’ve seen all four vendors together on stage, a subdued bunch if ever there was one. All four seemed to agree with each other on most every talking point – the main one being whether interoperability is a fantasy or a reality that will someday be achieved. I was hoping for fisticuffs, but no such luck. I attempted to stir things up by raising my hand when moderator Shahid Shah asked, “Who in the audience believes these guys are the reason interoperability doesn’t yet exist?” Most of the 800-plus attendees were either too polite or too inattentive to answer honestly, keeping their hands firmly in their laps.


Webinars

November 11 (Wednesday) 2:00 ET. “Trouble Upstream: The Underinsured and Cash Flow Challenges.” Sponsored by TransUnion. Presenter: Jonathan Wiik, principal consultant, TransUnion Healthcare. The average person spends nearly $15,000 per year on healthcare as deductibles keep rising. Providers must educate their patients on plan costs and benefits while controlling their own collection costs by using estimation tools, propensity-to-pay analytics, and point-of-sale collections. This webinar will highlight industry trends in managing underinsured patients and will describe ways to match patients to appropriate funding.

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November 12 (Thursday) 1 :00 ET. “Top Predictions for Population Health Management in 2016 and Beyond.” Sponsored by Medecision. Presenters: Tobias C. Samo, MD, FACP, FHIMSS, CMIO, Medecision; Laura Kanov, BS, RRT, MBA, SVP of care delivery organization solutions, Medecision. With all the noise and hype around population health management, the presenters will share their predictions for 2016 and their insight into meeting the mounting pressures of value-based reimbursement and the tools and technology needed to manage care delivery.

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


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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The Toledo Clinic (OH) joins the Ohio Independent Collaborative, citing the fact that OIC’s members are on the same EHR as a contributing factor to its membership. The clinic joins six other physician groups in the collaborative, which now covers a combined 900,000 patient lives. OIC members plan to work on clinical quality, patient care, and provider access initiatives in hopes of eventually creating a competing care option in the health system-dominated marketplace.

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Nonprofit crowdfunding site Watsi receives a $3.5 million Series A-like investment from a bevy of investors, which it will use to hire additional engineers and to stave off internal fundraising. Since graduating from Y Combinator in 2012, Watsi has helped 5,000 patients in 20 countries raise money for healthcare procedures. It hopes to help 1 million patients by 2020.

MinuteClinic opens its first retail clinics in Maine. There are now over 1,000 such clinics in 33 states.


Announcements and Implementations

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Kansas Imaging Consultants implements RCM solutions from Zotec Partners across its team of 28 radiologists and four facilities.

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Kaiser Permanente Northwest (OR) becomes the first physician group in the state to offer online patient ratings of its 1,300-plus physicians. Ratings are based on cumulative, after-visit patient surveys administered by Press Ganey.

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The 450 square-foot AMA Interaction Studio opens at Matter, a healthcare collaborative and co-working space in Chicago. The organizations launched an official partnership in February, bringing together physicians and entrepreneurs for educational workshops, interactive simulations, and collaboration events focused on healthcare improvement. The new studio offers a “unique technological test bed” for creating products in  simulated medical settings.


Government and Politics

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As part of a broader focus on battling the US “opioid epidemic,” CMS releases an online interactive mapping tool that shows de-identified Medicare Part D opioid prescription claims by location and percentage. “The opioid abuse and overdose epidemic continues to devastate American families,” says CDC Director Tom Frieden, MD. “This mapping tool will help doctors, nurses, and other healthcare providers assess opioid-prescribing habits while continuing to ensure patients have access to the most effective pain treatment. Informing prescribers can help reduce opioid use disorder among patients.” I sincerely hope the military community of physicians pays particular attention to prescription rates on US bases. It saddens me that our nation’s armed forces have developed a reputation for over prescribing painkillers.

Healthcare.gov rolls out a beta Doctor Lookup feature, enabling one in four random users to search for health plans by preferred physician or facility. The site will also roll out a corresponding Prescription Drug Check tool, which will allow consumers to search for plans that cover their prescription drugs.


People

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Robert Pepper (Visicu) joins Orion Health as vice president of marketing for North America.


Telemedicine

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Behavioral health specialty pharmacy services vendor Genoa offers telepsychiatry services after acquiring New York City-based telepsychiatry vendor 1DocWay for an undisclosed sum.


Research and Innovation

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A survey of 5,000 patients shows there’s still quite a gap between the availability of patient engagement tools and physicians that offer them. Just one in five of those surveyed have access to online appointment scheduling, while less than half receive even traditional appointment reminders via phone. Just 15 percent communicate with their physician via secure email, and only 9 percent receive reminders via text. Researchers attribute the low utilization numbers to a lack of appropriate physician incentives, plus regulatory and legislative adoption barriers. Consumer awareness may also play a part, highlighting what seems like an ever-increasing need for patient and physician education on the benefits of such technologies.

A Colorado study finds “staggering cost differentials” between care settings for identical ailments. Treatment for a common cold in the ER averaged $709 versus $114 in a physician’s office or urgent care clinic. Headaches racked up the biggest difference – $2,010 in the ER versus $375 in the outpatient setting. Close to 40 percent of the state’s ER visits occur for non-emergency reasons, leading researchers to conclude that the state could save up to $800 million annually if patients seek office-based care first.


Other

AMA adds 20 medical schools to its Accelerating Change in Medical Education Consortium, which is working to develop the “medical school of the future.” Launched with 11 schools in 2013, the latest round of academic institutions will receive $75,000 each over the next three years to develop innovative curriculums that will better prepare students for the challenges of working in today’s healthcare system. “By working together,” explains Susan Skochelak, MD AMA group vice president for medical education, “we believe that during the next several years this effort will produce physicians who are not just skilled clinicians, but system-based thinkers, change agents, technology champions, and inter-professional team players.”

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Ada Igonoh, MD the only female medical doctor to survive Ebola, gives birth to a healthy baby girl at Greater El-Monte Community Hospital (CA). In addition to being a mom and physician, the Nigerian-born Igonoh is now a public health advocate and motivational speaker.


Sponsor Updates

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  • Medicity celebrated Halloween with an ICD-10 graveyard titled “You Don’t Want to Die on This Hill.”
  • Aprima will exhibit at the American College of Rheumatology Annual Meeting November 8-10 in San Francisco.
  • Nordic releases a video titled “After ICD-10: Minimizing pain, increasing gain.”
  • EClinicalWorks and Healthwise will exhibit at the mHealth Summit November 5-6 in National Harbor, MD.

Blog Posts


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 11/3/15

November 3, 2015 News Comments Off on News 11/3/15

Top News

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Teladoc announces Q3 results: total revenue of $20 million, up 83 percent over Q3 2014; membership of 12.6 million users; and nearly 118,000 visits, up nearly 90 percent year over year. The company experienced an operating loss of $13.2 million, and expects to see revenue of between $21 and $22 million at the end of Q4. CEO Jason Gorevic noted during the earnings conference call that the company had signed up 500 new clients in Q3 alone, including Starbucks,  Dell, Merck, Marriott, and Mercedes-Benz.


Webinars

November 11 (Wednesday) 2:00 ET. “Trouble Upstream: The Underinsured and Cash Flow Challenges.” Sponsored by TransUnion. Presenter: Jonathan Wiik, principal consultant, TransUnion Healthcare. The average person spends nearly $15,000 per year on healthcare as deductibles keep rising. Providers must educate their patients on plan costs and benefits while controlling their own collection costs by using estimation tools, propensity-to-pay analytics, and point-of-sale collections. This webinar will highlight industry trends in managing underinsured patients and will describe ways to match patients to appropriate funding.

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November 12 (Thursday) 1 :00 ET. “Top Predictions for Population Health Management in 2016 and Beyond.” Sponsored by Medecision. Presenters: Tobias C. Samo, MD, FACP, FHIMSS, CMIO, Medecision; Laura Kanov, BS, RRT, MBA, SVP of care delivery organization solutions, Medecision. With all the noise and hype around population health management, the presenters will share their predictions for 2016 and their insight into meeting the mounting pressures of value-based reimbursement and the tools and technology needed to manage care delivery.

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


Announcements and Implementations

Aprima selects Kno2’s Direct messaging platform to better enable its customers to meet requirements for electronic transmission of Transition of Care documents as required by Stage 2 of Meaningful Use.

Office Ally integrates TSI’s collections interface into its Practice Mate PM and EHR platform. In addition to making a practice’s collection log and activities more transparent, the integrated system will aid in the transfer of delinquent patient accounts to TSI for collections.

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The NC Medical Society Foundation receives a three-year, $440,500 grant from the Kate B. Reynolds Charitable Trust, which it will use to help up to 15 rural physician practices transition to value-based care. The foundation has tapped Highpoint, NC-based Chess to lead the program. The healthcare services firm will offer the practices healthcare IT support, training in care coordination and patient engagement, and advice on how to integrate with community health and faith-based resources, with the ultimate goal of preparing the practices to transition to a Medicare ACO business model.

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Sanctus Healthcare implements chronic-care management services from McKesson Business Performance Services across its multispecialty Pacific Private Practice network of 212 independent physicians in Orange County, CA.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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RCM and analytics vendor Encoda acquires Strategic Management Consultants. Terms of the deal were not disclosed. SMC President and CEO Bobby Mehan will join Philadelphia-based Encoda as vice president of business development. SMC will take on the Encoda name; its operations will remain in Carrollton, GA.

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SCI Solutions acquires referral management vendor Clarity Health for an undisclosed sum. SCI gains 20 employees through the deal and plans to hire more staff in the coming months, according to CEO Joel French. The newly combined company will ultimately be headquartered in Seattle.


People

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Richard Cassidy, MD (Teladoc) joins ACO Health Partners as CEO.

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Peter McClennen joins Best Doctors as CEO, and joins the company’s Board of Directors.


Other

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New York University School of Medicine puts its first- and second-year students through their paces, assigning them a “healthcare by the numbers” project that aims to help train them on accessing and interpreting health data. Students are given access to a database of over 5 million anonymous patient hospital records, plus a database of over 50,000 outpatient records that goes by the name of Lacidem Care Group. (“Lacidem” is medical spelled backwards, in case you were wondering.) Students are encouraged to look at quality measures for a variety of conditions, and to drill down into individual physician and practice performance.


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

Readers Write: Climbing Out of the Pool of Unpaid Patient Payments

November 3, 2015 News Comments Off on Readers Write: Climbing Out of the Pool of Unpaid Patient Payments

Climbing Out of the Pool of Unpaid Patient Payments
By Hanny Freiwat

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Feel like you’re swimming in unpaid patient invoices? It’s a common problem in physician practices today. In fact, when a patient leaves the office without paying, 79 percent of those fees owed end up going uncollected. Studies have shown that it’s not that patients don’t want to pay, but that there isn’t a convenient option for paying. In this changing landscape, healthcare operations have not quite caught up with consumer-centric technology needs and expectations. You can change that for your practice.

Here are four easy ways for physician practices to increase patient payments before the end of the year, decrease accounts receivables, and avoid high bad-debt rates.

Number One: Offer an easy-to-access online payment link on the practice’s website. If you already have one available on your patient portal, ask your accounts receivable manager how many payments come through there. If it is near zero, which is the case with most practices, find an easier way that doesn’t require a user name and password. Look for payment partners who understand HIPAA and PCI compliance, and set up a link today. Make sure that you advertise the new payment link on your invoices and in the office. Patients and guarantors want convenience – not more passwords to remember. This solution should take one to two hours to implement, in addition to the research time.

Number Two: Add a card-on-file policy to your existing financial policy, complemented by any pro bono services you offer. Find a technology and payment partner who has a PCI-compliant service and implement it immediately. The solution should be patient friendly and have a limit on how much you can charge their credit or debit card. Train your staff on usage, and more importantly, on having the conversation with the patients before they get the service. If your patients are not willing to vault (secure) a card on file with you, there is a good chance they will not pay the bill. This solution is more involved and can take 10-15 hours to implement due to integration and staff training.

Number Three: Validate the patient’s insurance eligibility days prior to the service date, or at least when the patient walks in if you’re an urgent care clinic or similar walk-in practice. Make sure that the technology you’re using is delivering the data you need for your specialty and not a generic data dump. Use that data to determine your risk and the amount you should collect at the time of service, and how much to vault on your card-on-file solution for post-claim collections. If you’re not sure how much copay you should collect, vault a card on file to avoid confusion and refund expenses. This solution should be available through your current EHR and PM systems. If not, start thinking about getting a complementary solution as soon as possible. With ACA and MCOs, this is more important than ever. You need a “Know Your Patient” solution in place in 2016 or expect to get double hit by narrow networks and confused patients. Depending on your practice size, this could take as little as a week or as many as two to three months.

Number Four: Get on the cutting edge and look for other ways for your patients to pay. Medical mobile bill pay and price estimator vendors are out there. Find and partner with those that understand your patient needs. This might sound foreign in healthcare, but we’re all consumers and know how to use the tools. Time spent to implement this will depend on the solution and vendor you choose.

Going forward, look at your job descriptions and make sure that you have financial counseling and payment collections as part of the duties of your scheduling and front office teams. Fully implementing this strategy will drive your patient responsibility revenue to near 100 percent. In addition, you should see savings from less billing and less traditional payment collections. Once you fully make the shift, you and your staff will be free to get back to the business you love – caring for patients.

Hanny Freiwat is president of Wellero in Portland, OR.


Contacts

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

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Connect.

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JennHIStalk

News 11/2/15

November 2, 2015 News Comments Off on News 11/2/15

Top News

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Healthcare.gov’s third open enrollment kicks off, with nary an IT meltdown-related headline in sight (none have made it to my inbox, at any rate). The site made news in the weeks leading up to November 1 for its scramble to fine-tune comparison-shopping features, and inadvertently approving fake applicants. HHS is of course still working to reach the 10 million consumers who remain uninsured, focusing on a variety of digital media outreach campaigns, as well as a new app that helps shoppers find the most appropriate plan for their level of healthcare utilization.   


HIStalk Practice Announcements and Requests

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Rarely does my obsession with healthcare and technology overlap with the interests of friends and family, who typically nod their heads politely when I explain to them how exciting it is to work for HIStalk. The launch of a new antimicrobial paint for healthcare facilities from Sherwin-Williams has changed all that, giving me and my neighbor (a higher up at SW) a chance to exchange statistics related to hospital-acquired infections. The new 59-color Paint Shield line promises to kill nearly 100 percent of several types of infection-causing bacteria up to two hours after exposure, and lasts for four years. It launches early next year.

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I’m heading to the Health IT Leadership Summit tomorrow, an annual event I’ve attended for several years now. As with most conferences, it’s really all about the networking, though I am looking forward to the “Insider’s Look at EHR Vendors” panel featuring reps from Epic, Greenway, Cerner, and RelayHealth. Feel free to follow along via my live updates from @JennHIStalk.


Webinars

November 11 (Wednesday) 2:00 ET. “Trouble Upstream: The Underinsured and Cash Flow Challenges.” Sponsored by TransUnion. Presenter: Jonathan Wiik, principal consultant, TransUnion Healthcare. The average person spends nearly $15,000 per year on healthcare as deductibles keep rising. Providers must educate their patients on plan costs and benefits while controlling their own collection costs by using estimation tools, propensity-to-pay analytics, and point-of-sale collections. This webinar will highlight industry trends in managing underinsured patients and will describe ways to match patients to appropriate funding.

image image

November 12 (Thursday) 1 :00 ET. “Top Predictions for Population Health Management in 2016 and Beyond.” Sponsored by Medecision. Presenters: Tobias C. Samo, MD, FACP, FHIMSS, CMIO, Medecision; Laura Kanov, BS, RRT, MBA, SVP of care delivery organization solutions, Medecision. With all the noise and hype around population health management, the presenters will share their predictions for 2016 and their insight into meeting the mounting pressures of value-based reimbursement and the tools and technology needed to manage care delivery.

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


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

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EClinicalWorks partners with retail chain Specsavers, which operates over 1,700 optical and hearing stores in 10 countries. The company will integrate the EClinicalWorks EHR and PM platform into its CRM, finance, product data, and global store-ordering systems. SpecSavers has implemented the technology in New Zealand, and plans to roll it out to stores in the UK, Australia, and Europe.

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Startupbootcamp, Europe’s largest business accelerator, brings its program to the US by way of Miami, where it will launch a program focused on supporting and scaling digital health companies. Ten companies will be selected each year to participate in the three-month program; chosen startups will receive six months of free co-working office space, $20,000 in seed funding, and in-kind services from partners including Amazon Web Services and Google. Applications for the first class, kicking off in Spring 2016, are due February 1.

And speaking of healthcare IT in Miami … the Miami Herald paints a pretty compelling picture of South Florida’s booming HIT business, citing heavy 2015 VC funding rounds for MDLive, Modernizing Medicine, and OrthoSensor, plus an employment boom generated by CareCloud and MDLive.

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HP completes its planned split into HP Inc., which will sell personal computers and printers; and Hewlett Packard Enterprise, which will sell computer servers, data storage, networking, software, and consulting services. Each company is expected to generate an annual revenue of $50 billion. HP executives Dion Weisler and Meg Whitman will lead HP Inc. and HPE, respectively.


People

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Milton Silva-Craig (Q-Centrix) joins the HealthMyne Board of Directors.

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Peter Antall, MD (Online Care Group) joins American Well as its first chief medical officer.

WEDI awards its annual HIT Government Champion Award to Shana Olshan, director of the National Standards Group at the Office of Enterprise Information at CMS.


Announcements and Implementations

Banner Medical Group rolls out RCM solutions from Zotec Partners to its 17 anesthesiologists and 31 CRNAs in Northern Colorado.

ZappRx signs up for the ePrescribing State Law Review from Point-of-Care Partners. The specialty medication management IT vendor will use the data set to prepare its staff and end users for new eprescribing mandates.


Government and Politics

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HHS launches an investigation into Republican State Senate candidate Siobhan Dunnavant, MD’s alleged use of private patient data to solicit contributions, volunteers, and votes via email and letter-writing campaigns. At issue is whether or not patient information was viewed by anyone outside of Dunnavant’s practice, a HIPAA violation that could result in hefty fines.

CMS releases the final Medicare physician payment rules. At a whopping 1,358 pages, I have decided to abstain from attempting to pluck out the highlights. (I’m secretly hoping Dr. Jayne will do the dirty work for me.)

Building on the success of Health Datapalooza and successive federal datapalooza events, the White House Office of Science and Technology Policy announces plans for a 2016 government-wide data exposition that will highlight how open government data and APIs are being used in innovative ways across industry sectors and federal agencies.


Telemedicine

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The American Telemedicine Association expresses its concerns with the State of Arkansas’ draft telemedicine proposal, focusing on language relating to informed consent, eprescribing, and practice standards. “[W]e believe that the Board’s proposed draft will require licensed Arkansas physicians to follow a separate standard of practice when using telemedicine,” the ATA writes, “resulting in two different standards of care for patients in the same state.” The Arkansas State Medical Board will meet on Wednesday to discuss the proposal.


Research and Innovation

A study of 2,147 patients finds that those with access to their physician’s notes via a Web portal showed improved medication adherence. Nearly 80 percent of patients with access to notes from their PCPs were adherent to their antihypertensive medication regimen, versus 75.3 percent of the control group.


Other

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Medial Associates of Albany (GA) staffers have some serious fun participating in the practice’s fifth annual costume contest.

A Health Affairs study of four major restaurant chains in New York City finds that the practice of displaying calorie counts next to menu items has little to no bearing on a patron’s decision to choose healthy fare. One of the researchers makes a very good point in noting that diners at fast food restaurants typically don’t eat at those establishments for health reasons. If they’re anything like me, they’re looking to get a quick and cheap fix for a particular craving. As with most things healthcare, the report concluded that the “greatest impact of mandatory menu labeling on population health may come from restaurants’ changing the calories of their menu items instead of consumers’ changing their behavior.”


Sponsor Updates

  • Leidos Health will exhibit at the NextGen User Conference November 1-4 in Las Vegas.
  • PerfectServe will exhibit at ASN Kidney Week November 3-8 in San Diego.

Blog Posts


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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