Recent Articles:

News 9/23/15

September 23, 2015 News Comments Off on News 9/23/15

Top News

image

GE Healthcare creates Sustainable Healthcare Solutions, a new division that will serve emerging markets in Africa, India, and South and Southeast Asia. SHS will invest $300 million in a multi-phase effort to develop low-cost, high-value technologies and delivery solutions, working with local partners such as governments, business, NGOs, and physicians to roll them out. “SHS will leverage GE’s Fastworks methodology to accelerate, test, and rapidly commercialize relevant, affordable technologies,” explains Terri Bresenham, president and CEO of the new division. “By taking this ‘start-up’ model approach, we can rapidly test new ideas, products, and services to maximize effectiveness for customers before we scale up.”


HIStalk Practice Announcements and Requests

image

While we’re on the subject of emerging markets … I had the opportunity to hear a presentation on health data disparity from Vecna Technologies co-founder and CEO Deborah Theobald yesterday, during which she presented the CliniPak, a “lightweight” EHR that requires minimal training and can be hooked up to a variety of power sources (including a car battery!) One hundred of the devices are in the field – free clinics, hospitals, medical missions – in the very markets GE Healthcare’s new division will target, which makes me wonder if there’s some potential synergy between the two companies. 

image

Working remotely sometimes has its drawbacks, as I discovered when connected to guest WiFi at a venue I rarely frequent. The content filtering service listed HIStalk Practice as “not rated,” so I submitted a request to have it classified appropriately, which will hopefully enable access the next time I visit. HIStalk and HIStalk Connect were a-ok, making me wonder if other services consider HP to be the black sheep of the HIStalk family.

A friend and I were discussing favorite industry podcasts earlier today, which made me realize I only know of a handful devoted to healthcare IT. Are there others I should be tuning in to? Any I shouldn’t waste my time with? Let me know via the comments below.


Webinars

October 7 (Wednesday) 1:00 ET. “Develop Your Analysts and They’ll Pay for Themselves.” Sponsored by Health Catalyst. Presenters: Peter Monaco, senior business intelligence developer, Health Catalyst; Russ Stahli, VP, Health Catalyst. It takes years for analysts to develop the skills they need to build reports and dashboards that turn data into valuable insights. This webinar will describe how to cultivate those analytical skills, including technical prowess and adaptive leadership. Leaders will learn how to develop a culture that fosters improvement, how to encourage analysts to develop the right skills, and ways to remove the barriers that stand in their way.

 

Here’s the video of Tuesday’s webinar from The Breakaway Group titled “Just Step on the Scale: Measure Ongoing EHR Success and Focus Improvements using Simple but Predictive Adoption Metrics.”


#HIStalking Tweet Chat – Portals, Mobile Devices, and Patient Engagement

image

Frank Fortner (@iatricFJF) will host the next #HIStalking tweet chat on Thursday, September 24 at 1pm ET. Check out discussion topics here.


Telemedicine

image

Community health center network Horizon Health Care (SD) plans to expand its telemedicine services thanks to a $292,000 Expanded Services Grant from HHS. Horizon was also named as one of the 160 recipients of the HHS $1 million Health Infrastructure Investment Program Grant, which it will use to renovate and expand its facility in Aberdeen.


Announcements and Implementations

image

FQHC Central Virginia Health Services implements the EClinicalWorks EHR for 70 physicians across 15 locations. CVHS joins the 54 percent of FQHCs across the US using the eCW tool.

Renaissance Health Network, a Pennsylvania-based IPA with over 70 locations, selects digital chronic care management tools from MD Revolution and WellTrackOne to better manage chronic and preventative care.

image

Boston-based Whoop launches a wearable wristband that goes beyond the more traditional metrics of a Fitbit or Jawbone. Geared towards elite athletes, the wristband measures skin conductivity and heart-rate variability, as well as how the athlete’s body recovers. The device, including analytics, doesn’t come cheap, clocking in at between $500 and $5,000 a year for individuals and upwards of $100,000 a year for teams. Whoop investors include Mike Mancias, a medical analytics advocate and the long-time personal trainer of LeBron James.

MDTool Box adds a certified real-time EPA module to the MDToolbox-Rx e-prescribing product.

AHIMA launches Code-Check, a coding question and resource service for members and non-members that will be available via ongoing subscription or one-time use starting October 12.


People

image

The New Jersey Health Care Quality Institute promotes Linda Schwimmer to president.


Government and Politics

image

Massachusetts Medical Society President Dennis Dimitri, MD testifies before the state’s Joint Committee on Health Care Financing in strong support of providing additional time for physicians to comply with a mandate requiring them to establish an interoperable EHR by 2017. “While physicians are much further along on interoperable records than many other professions, 2017 is not achievable for all of us and much less so for other providers,” Dimitri said during his testimony. “This date was arbitrary and aspirational when established and needs to be recalculated to a more reasonable goal, such as 2022.”


Research and Innovation

image

Austin Regional Clinic (TX) tests out Humm patient feedback technology as part of a three-month pilot program at three of its clinics. The Central Texas locations are trying out different feedback devices to determine which is the best fit for their patient populations – a standing kiosk in public areas, a tablet handed to patients at checkout, and a table-top tablet in each exam room. The pilot runs through the end of this month. ARC has already collected real-time feedback from 4,000 visits.

image

The local paper profiles Harrington Family Health Center (ME) and its use of tablets and medical-related apps, including a symptom checker, pill identifier, dosage calculator, and medical encyclopedias. The tablets, provided by nonprofit Health eVillages (founded by Physicians Interactive CEO Donato Tramuto), have proved helpful in caring for the rural area’s patients suffering from multiple chronic conditions. HFHC staff provide feedback to Health eVillages as to how they’re using the devices and what’s of most value. They eventually hope to tie the project to population health metrics.


Other

image

The local business paper dives into the year-long ICD-10 prep undertaken by Southeast Orthopedic Specialists (FL). The process, which CFO Scott Quinn says costs in the six figures, involved overhauling software, employee training, and making sure outside vendors were aware of the changes. “What really helps is communicating with every party involved in the revenue cycle,” Quinn says. “Making sure the front desk, billing, and third-party partners are all up to speed.”

image

The Annals of Improbable Research (distant cousin to the Nobel Prizes) award their annual Ig Nobel prizes for a variety of “comical scientific achievements.” Lauded research included the revelation that nearly all mammals take about 21 seconds to urinate, the ability to partially un-boil an egg with chemicals, and the mathematical determination of how a 17th century North African emperor fathered nearly 900 kids in just 30 years. The Ig Nobel medicine prize went to researchers who conducted “experiments” to study the biological effects of intense kissing, which include decreasing skin allergies.


Sponsor Updates

  • Aprima Medical Software will exhibit at the Colorado MGMA Fall Conference September 24-25 in Breckinridge.
  • Clockwise.MD CEO Mike Burke will speak at the Urgent Care Fall Conference September 24-26 in New Orleans.
  • Nordic adds its 500th Epic consultant.

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 9/22/15

September 22, 2015 News Comments Off on News 9/22/15

Top News

image

The White Houses releases findings from a Broadband Opportunity Council review of government programs that provide assistance for broadband, highlighting the need for increased support and infrastructure development. The report, which seems to have gone through a month-long review process given the August 20 publication date, includes the news that HHS will award $25 million in grants by the end of next year to assist health centers in implementing EHRs and other healthcare IT to improve care and patient access to data. A series of national HHS connectivity workshops will also be held to help consumers and healthcare organizations work with government agencies to expand and/or upgrade broadband connectivity. It will be interesting to see how, in a year’s time, grant awardees incorporate telemedicine initiatives into their broadband expansion plans.


HIStalk Practice Announcements and Requests

Most of my day has been spent en route, which makes this section more about musings than announcements or requests. I don’t fly often, but when I do I thoroughly enjoy the solitude and accompanying lack of interruptions. I’ve put in some of my most productive hours at 30,000 feet. What did we do before in-flight WiFi? Note to ladies: Wearing sequined shirts will get you a not-quite full-body pat down at the security checkpoint. The TSA employee who did the honors made it slightly less awkward by complimenting my sparkle. Note to men: Please don’t file your nails in public. If you’ve got enough time to whip out a nail file, chances are you’ve got enough time to walk to the nearest restroom to give yourself a manicure.


#HIStalking Tweet Chat – Portals, Mobile Devices, and Patient Engagement

image

Frank Fortner (@iatricFJF) will host the next #HIStalking tweet chat on Thursday, September 24 at 1pm ET. Check out discussion topics here.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

image

Cohero Health launches its mobile health platform for asthma at TechCrunch Disrupt in San Francisco. The FDA-approved platform includes a medication inhaler sensor with accompanying smartphone app that tracks adherence, and a mobile spirometer to monitor lung function. The New York City-based startup plans to market its technology to payers, pharmaceutical companies, and clinics that still use “chunky equipment” to monitor lung function.


People

image

Joe Purnell (Healthcare Advisors) joins Wrightsville Beach, NC-based DocsInk as chief growth officer.


Announcements and Implementations

BestPT Billing offers the GEMs Plus Solution to assist physical therapy practices with the transition to ICD-10.

image

DigiChart adds practice analytics and medical billing services to its EHR for OB/GYN practices. 


Government and Politics

The FDA announces the establishment of a patient engagement advisory committee, which will advise FDA Acting Commissioner Stephen Ostroff, MD on issues relating to medical devices, as well as their regulation and use by patients. The administration is also seeking public input on issues the new committee should address.

image

The Institute of Medicine of the National Academies of Sciences, Engineering, and Medicine (quite a mouthful) reports that most US patients will receive at least one misdiagnosis or delayed diagnosis during their lifetimes – a dismal statistic that begs the question, how has healthcare IT improved or exacerbated these diagnostic errors? It all comes back to interoperability, in my opinion. The IOM notes that, “Improving diagnosis is a complex challenge, partly because making a diagnosis is a collaborative and inherently inexact process that may unfold over time and across different healthcare settings.” Among its laundry list of recommendations is the charge for healthcare organizations to provide patients with opportunities to learn about diagnosis; improved access to EHRs, including clinical notes and test results; and settings in which patients and caregivers are made to feel comfortable sharing diagnosis feedback and concerns.


Telemedicine

image

The Wounded Warrior Project awards Brain Injury Services of Southwest Virginia a $125,000 grant to expand its Community Living Connection for Veterans telemedicine program for veterans with traumatic brain injuries. BISSWVA provides its services to veterans at no cost.

The University of Texas Rio Grande Valley’s counseling center teams with the VA to roll out a mental health telemedicine program for student veterans. “One thing that shows strength,” explains UTRGV Counseling Center Director Christopher Albert, “is being able to admit ‘Hey, I’m having difficulty with it,’ and reaching out for help, learning new skills to be able to be more resilient, whether it’s on the battle field or here on campus.”


Research and Innovation

image

A survey of over 1,000 medical students reveals that the issue of interoperability is alive and well in the hallowed halls of academia. Students believe fragmented care is the number one safety risk for patients, while nearly 100 percent feel easily sharing patient health data between care teams is critical to care improvement. Less than half, however, are worried about the ability to do so within a practice or hospital. Close to 75 percent are concerned about the ability of unaffiliated practices to share patient records. Surprisingly, students don’t have much love for initial patient encounters via telemedicine – perhaps that’s a reflection of their desire to show off the bedside manner they’ve trained so hard to acquire.


Other

image

AHIMA CEO Lynne Thomas Gordon chimes in on the recent New York Times doom-and-gloom coverage of the ICD-10 transition, noting that some organizations (and physicians) are indeed afraid of change. “But with change comes opportunity,” she adds. “The greater detail in ICD-10 codes will tell a more accurate and complete patient story and reverse the trend of deteriorating health data. The richer data will increase the ability to measure quality, safety, and efficacy of care; reduce fraud and waste; and ensure that healthcare dollars are used most efficiently. This is a point that everyone can agree on.” Gordon will likely get an earful of ICD-10 transition tales during AHIMA’s annual convention September 26-29 in New Orleans.

image

A little ICD-10 humor from the above-mentioned BestPT


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

Portals, Mobile Devices, and Patient Engagement – #HIStalking Tweet Chat Thursday, September 24 at 1pm ET

September 21, 2015 News Comments Off on Portals, Mobile Devices, and Patient Engagement – #HIStalking Tweet Chat Thursday, September 24 at 1pm ET

Join @JennHIStalk and @iatricFJF (Frank Fortner, president of Iatric Systems) for a discussion on portals, mobile devices and patient engagement. Preview #HIStalking discussion questions below and brush up on how to participate in a tweet chat towards the end of this post.

image

The healthcare industry – patients, providers, and vendors alike – have discussed patient-centered healthcare for a while. Today’s patient engagement isn’t the end-game because data from various, disparate systems sit in silos and isn’t easily accessed by patients. Further, most of today’s tools deliver a monologue of data flow “to” the patient, with very few solutions able to receive data “from” the patient. Providers must find better ways to deliver the tools patients need to truly become active in their own healthcare, where patient data from all sources is presented to patients in a simple, clear, and actionable way; and where appropriate patient-generated data has a pathway back to providers.

A recent run-in with my two year-old Lab mix named George and a sidewalk sent me to the local ED with a separated shoulder. The ED and orthopedist’s office separately emailed me instructions on how to enroll in their patient portals, and yet, like many patients, I did nothing with them.

I quickly realized the issue may not be that providers aren’t trying to engage patients or that there’s even a lack of technology; it might be that we aren’t using the technology already sitting in our hands.

Pew Research Center recently found that 64 percent of Americans own smartphones, with a large majority being used for Internet access. Combine this with the abundance of customized smartphones apps and it seems these handheld devices can be used for just about anything. The question then becomes, why aren’t these devices more prevalent in healthcare as a bridge across the patient engagement chasm?

As the president of a healthcare technology company that has created various patient portals, I completely see their value. But, combining portals with today’s smartphone technology – the device most have integrated into their every waking hour – would better enable patients to view, download, and transmit their health data from, and even back to providers. This would lay the groundwork for creating a more patient-centric and patient-involved environment.

During my time in the ED, if I could have enrolled my mobile device, which I would’ve done to take my mind off the pain, I would now have my imaging report, diagnosis, and electronic discharge instructions in my pocket and available for the next provider.

With that, I’m excited for the opportunity to host this Thursday’s #HIStalking tweet chat about patient portals, mobile devices, and how they can help engage patients.

#HIStalking Discussion Questions

Q1: How have you personally benefited from a patient portal or mobile patient access application?

Q2: Would consumerism have eventually drawn focus to patient engagement without the government’s push?

Q3: Patient portal adoption rates are near 25 percent, or one in four patients in physician practices of all sizes. Why isn’t this higher?

Q4: What killer app or feature is missing in today’s patient engagement solutions?

Q5: Technology has been the initial focus, but patient engagement is so much more. What has the industry missed by concentrating on portals?

Bonus Q: Looking down the road,  in the next five-plus years, how do you feel today’s patient engagement initiatives will impact the healthcare experience?


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

News 9/21/15

September 21, 2015 News Comments Off on News 9/21/15

Top News

image

ONC releases the final Federal Health IT Strategic Plan 2015-2020, a 50-page action plan for agencies that use or influence the utilization of health IT as they work towards establishing interoperability across the healthcare continuum. The final plan incorporates the December 2014 draft, input from 35 federal agencies, and recommendations from over 400 individuals and organizations. In introducing the plan, National Coordinator Karen DeSalvo, MD explains, “With this Plan, the federal government signals that, while we will continue to work towards widespread use of all forms of health IT, efforts will begin to include new sources of information and ways to disseminate knowledge quickly, securely, and efficiently. This Plan will help guide the nation’s shift towards focusing on better health and delivery system reform.” I hope to give the entire plan my full attention while en route to Boston tomorrow. Feel free to share your impressions of ONC’s five-year guide for health IT in the comments below.


Webinars

image image

September 22 (Tuesday) noon ET. “Just Step on the Scale: Measure Ongoing EHR Success and Focus Improvements Using Simple but Predictive Adoption Metrics.” Sponsored by The Breakaway Group. Presenters:  Heather Haugen, PhD, CEO and managing director, The Breakaway Group; Gene Thomas, VP/CIO, Memorial Hospital at Gulfport. Simple performance metrics such as those measuring end-user proficiency and clinical leadership engagement can accurately assess EHR adoption. This presentation will describe how Memorial Hospital at Gulfport used an EHR adoption assessment to quickly target priorities in gaining value from its large Cerner implementation, with real-life results proving the need for a disciplined approach to set and measure key success factors. Commit to taking that scary first step and step onto the scale, knowing that it will get measurably better every day.

image image

September 22 (Tuesday) 5 p.m. ET. “Laying the Groundwork for an Effective CDS Strategy: Prepare for CMS’s Mandate for Advanced Imaging, Reduce Costs, and  Improve Care.” Sponsored by Stanson Health. Presenters: Scott Weingarten, MD, MPH, SVP and chief clinical transformation officer, Cedars-Sinai; Anne Wellington, VP of informatics, Stanson Health. Medicare will soon penalize physicians in specific settings who do not certify that they consulted "appropriate use" criteria before ordering advanced imaging services such as CT, MRI, nuclear medicine, and PET. This webinar will provide an overview of how this critical payment change is evolving, how it will likely be expanded, and how to begin preparations now. A key part of the CMS proposal is clinical decision support, which will help meet the new requirements while immediately unlocking EHR return on investment. Cedars-Sinai will discuss how they decreased inappropriate utilization of diagnostic tests and treatments, including imaging.


#HIStalking Tweet Chat – Portals, Mobile Devices, and Patient Engagement

image

Frank Fortner (@iatricFJF) will host the next #HIStalking tweet chat on Thursday, September 24 at 1pm ET. Check out discussion topics here.


Announcements and Implementations

Aprima expands its “Rescue Plan” that offers licensing discounts of up to 65 percent to users of an expanded list of EHRS that originally included only Allscripts MyWay.

image

Memorial Medical Group (IL) selects the EClinicalWorks EHR for its 78 Memorial Hospital-employed physicians across 30 locations. The hospital migrated to Meditech 6.0 about four years ago.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

image

Boca Raton, FL-based Modernizing Medicine closes a Series E financing round of $38 million, bringing its total raised to $87 million. Investors include Pentland Group, Summit Partners, and Sands Capital Ventures. The specialty EHR vendor completed its acquisition of gastroenterology-specific tech vendor gMed earlier this month.


Government and Politics

ONC awards $1 million in grants to 10 community programs to support their efforts to gather and share health data for improved patient decision-making and outcomes. The programs will use the new funding to support the EHR adoption efforts of providers that are ineligible for EHR Incentive Program participation. Grant awardees include the National Health Start Association, Georgia Health Information Network, and Rhode Island Quality Institute, which manages the state’s CurrentCare HIE. I interviewed RIQI President and CEO Laura Adams earlier this summer. 

image

The California Dept. of Insurance works with Consumer Reports and researchers at UC San Francisco to launch California Healthcare Compare. The consumer-friendly website offers quality data on common conditions and procedures, as well as pricing information by county for 100 procedures.

image

New data from ONC show that at least 8 out of 10 physicians used an EHR in 2014 – an increase of four percentage points from the year before. The new statistic, led by primary care docs, leads ONC to conclude that nearly three-quarters of physicians used a certified EHR last year. The news isn’t so rosy when it comes to solo physicians. Less than two-thirds had adopted an EHR, certified or otherwise, in 2014, while just over half had adopted a certified tool.


People

image

DaVita HealthCare partners promotes Atul Mathur to EVP of global operations. Mathur’s new role comes on the heels of the company’s acquisition of The Everett Clinic, a chain of 20 specialty and primary care sites north of Seattle.

image

Evelyn Whitlock, MD (Kaiser Permanente Northwest) joins the Patient-Centered Outcomes Research Institute as its new chief science officer.


Telemedicine

image

Chattanooga, TN-based WeCounsel adds automatic insurance verification to its telemedicine platform for behavioral health providers. The upgrade also enables physicians to bill for co-pays and submit claims through a designated clearing house. Side Note: Chattanooga has become one of my favorite get-away spots. It’s an extremely pedestrian- and bicycle-friendly town with unique tourist spots like Ruby Falls and Rock City, not to mention a great restaurant scene. Give Tony’s a whirl if you’re in the mood for Italian and find yourself in the Bluff View Arts District.

image

I’m beginning to wonder if the folks at ONC ever sleep … The office releases a white paper on consumer-centered telehealth, offering nine recommendations including the need for frictionless user experience, an increased focus on the security of patient data, and being wary of potential data overload. The need for Interoperability is of course included, as are telemedicine’s three biggest barriers to ubiquity: payment models; physician licensure; and care fragmentation and data fracturing.


Other

Amidst the fretting and fingernail-biting, Scientific American points out the impact ICD-10 will have on healthcare: “More detailed medical billing codes could eventually improve your healthcare. Those new codes could provide a clearer picture of why individuals seek care and which health problems are growing or contracting in communities —helping inform what health issues should be researched and improved. At least, that’s the hope.” That “at least” is a big caveat, given that most ICD-10 coverage has focused on the revenue damage control physicians are preparing for in the wake of October 1. (Dr. Jayne’s latest EPtalk alludes to one physician’s fear – and panic room preparation efforts – that he won’t be able to pay his staff due to ICD-10-related revenue problems.)

image

Author Tom Chiarella conducts an informal study of people’s reactions to uniforms, including that of a doctor. Donning scrubs, a lab coat, and an air of exasperation combined with busyness, he finds that, “The world wants to help a doctor. The uniform conveys a responsibility that people are willing to share. They took little bits from the priest, and ignored the security guard, and didn’t bother to see the mechanic, but they gave to the doctor. Ceaselessly and for many city blocks.”


Sponsor Updates

  • TriZetto Provider Solutions receives the Visionary for Children Award from the Children’s Home Society of Missouri.

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

Population Health Management Weekly Wrap Up 9/20/15

September 20, 2015 News Comments Off on Population Health Management Weekly Wrap Up 9/20/15

image

The HealthLinc FQHC (IN) goes live with Forward Health Group’s PopulationManager and The Guideline Advantage. The local paper provides a pretty good synopsis of the value the FQHC is already deriving from the new software, including improvements in controlling patient blood pressure and diabetes, and promoting smoking cessation.

image

Secure-messaging technology vendor Kryptiq rebrands as Enli Health Intelligence to better reflect its new focus on population health management tools. CEO Luis Machuca says the new name was derived from the notion that customers want to make “enlightened” choices for their patients based on accurate data and medical evidence.

image

The local paper looks at the ways in which healthcare technology is helping to reduce health disparities in certain patient populations, including those suffering from depression. Telepsychiatry in concert with EHRs are making an impact at Excela Health Medical Group (PA): A query of EHR data helped Excela staff realize that only 7 percent of patients with depression made recommended follow-up appointments. An outreach effort was then launched that boosted the rate to over 50 percent.

image

HIMSS ramps up promotions for its Population Health Summit November 8-11 at the Gaylord National Resort just outside of Washington, D.C. The lineup of speakers, which includes folks from Geisinger, Montefiore, and Vanderbilt, seems intriguing enough. The structure of the event – co-located with the mHealth Summit and CyberSecurity Summit –  plus the $795 price tag give me pause. I don’t know that I’d be able to totally immerse myself in one topic or wind up spreading myself too thin across all three. I will give the Gaylord resort high marks. It may be a bit inconvenient to get to from D.C. proper, but it’s a beautiful facility with tons of amenities, and great shopping and restaurants just across the street.

image

IGetBetter works with two hospitals in New England to develop and roll out its new COPD Care Plan, part of its library of plans for post-acute care transition and long-term population health management. The plan, which enables patients to monitor and better care for themselves at home, incorporates daily assessment tests and reminders, as well as activity monitors with customized alert levels. The hospitals piloting the new plan hope to reduce COPD readmissions and costs.

image

The worlds of academia and workforce development collide with the increasing need for predictive analytics and population health management experts at Saint Louis University Center for Health Outcomes Research, which has announced a new graduate program for training healthcare data scientists. The Healthcare Data Science program will offer students the chance to learn modern database management and analytics, with applications for patient care and public health. “The program addresses an important and growing demand for skilled professionals with ‘big data’ expertise to assist healthcare systems with reducing costs, improving safety, and managing population health,” says Eric Westhus, program director and assistant professor.

The Brookings Institution takes a look at improving chronic asthma management through population health, calling for team-based care, community engagement, and new payment models to transform care at the practice level. Healthcare technology comes into play in its suggested long-term action steps, including improving information sharing via the establishment of an information exchange clearinghouse.

Send me your population health management news for potential inclusion in future weekly wrap ups.


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

Platinum Sponsors


  

  

  


  

Gold Sponsors


 

Subscribe to Updates




Search All HIStalk Sites



Recent Comments

  1. The article about Pediatric Associates in CA has a nugget with a potentially outsized impact: the implication that VFC vaccines…

  2. Re: Walmart Health: Just had a great dental visit this morning, which was preceded by helpful reminders from Epic, and…

  3. NextGen announcement on Rusty makes me wonder why he was asked to leave abruptly. Knowing him, I can think of…

  4. "New Haven, CT-based medical billing and patient communications startup Inbox Health..." What you're literally saying here is that the firm…

  5. RE: Josephine County Public Health department in Oregon administer COVID-19 vaccines to fellow stranded motorists. "Hey, you guys over there…