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DOCtalk by Dr. Gregg 2/3/12

February 3, 2012 News 2 Comments

Hey, You, Get Onto My Cloud

Singing “I can’t get no satisfaction” last week must have set off some sort of cosmic karmic coincidence collision thing, because just after bemoaning the current general state of EHR techdom, I was given a jolt of inspiration sufficient to stop my sagging satisfaction sadsack soliloquy.

Thank you, Inga. Inga was my “scoop” source. She had recently heard of, and just finished interviewing, the chief executive officer and the director of marketing for the software that provided the aforementioned jolt for my EHR psyche. She had read my Jagger-infested article and e-mailed a simple, “Looked at CareCloud?” I hadn’t, but I soon did.

I Googled them and saw enough to more than pique my interest. Thanks to Inga’s introduction to Mike Cuesta, the marketing man mentioned above, I was able to hook up with Juan Molina, CareCloud’s director of biz dev/“Chief Evangelist”, and Nicole Trueba, events and outreach manager. They undertook some very kind squeeze-me-in scheduling and enabled a short, but quite enjoyable demo of CareCloud’s new Charts EHR software, along with a fast overview of their Central, Concierge, and Community solutions. (Central is PM, Concierge is back office/RCM stuff, and Community is a business-facing “social” community. The patient-facing version is coming.)

I could sense my satisfaction shooting up from the first page view. Their EHR component was just officially released January 20 of this year and it is, in a word, spectacular, in both look and feel.

Designed from the ground up to be “one platform” and browser agnostic, it is smooth, seamless, and fast. Starting with new technology allowed for technological design considerations that are simply impossible when trying to layer newness onto old code (e.g, Windows on top of DOS still has DOS-related issues that are virtually impossible to eliminate. I’m sure you can think of other such examples.)

Perhaps most apparent is the design excellence. Even before hearing that it is true, you can tell that they started out with user experience (UX) experts doing the human/computer interface design layout. The Web site says their UX folks spent hours studying provider workflows with their UX expert eyes. It comes through. Handing a beautiful design off to the programmers for them to then construct the actual mechanics beneath led to a UX that is truly “Apple-ified.” It is enjoyable to look upon, easy to navigate, and extremely workflow-friendly. It is vastly different from the typical experience you get when programming is core and design is secondarily considered.

I’ve said it for a long time: “App me, baby.” Well, they did. Apps are both a core element of the design and smoothly integrated so that you can add the apps you need as you need them and pocket them when you don’t.

Built on open architecture (Ruby on Rails and Adobe Flex), it is designed to be future-friendly. Instead of locking into current standards, these guys have learned that evolving technology means that great answers for today are the leg-irons for tomorrow’s development.

Another thing that really caught my attention was CareCloud’s social side. Their implementation of certain social aspects into the design creates huge workflow advantages. It struck me as almost the Facebook of EHRs. I’m not a huge Facebook user, but I nonetheless appreciate the value and power it provides in connecting people and facilitating interactions. Apparently these designers understood that from the outset, because the functionality for office use is extremely integrated and also appears to be extremely well-considered.

I’ve seen somewhat similar “digital ecosystems,” but never one as well thought out and as well implemented. Though as I mentioned, we had to sort of squeeze the first demo in and thus it was a limited overview, it was still one of the most impressive systems I have ever seen. Sure, it has some warts and needs to continue to evolve, but its starting point is so far down the path to greatness that it should make other developers shudder. It’s kick ass, to be sure.

In case you’re wondering, it is Drummond -certified as a Complete EHR and SureScripts-certified for ePrescribing. Not unimportantly, especially to small guys like me, they offer a pay-as-you-go plan or a comprehensive RCM version. Plus, they provide 24/7 real person support via phone, chat, or e-mail.

I’ve told the tale before that when I first saw Bond Clinician back in 2004, I almost told the rep to stay quiet, as it looked so nice and so straightforward that I thought I could probably start using it without any instruction. I mean, that’s exactly what iPads are: great-looking technology with tons of power that don’t even come with instruction manuals. I may learn differently as I dig deeper into it, but I’m thinking the CareCloud folks took a page from that playbook and have come as close as anyone to date in creating a truly iPad-ized EHR – one that is friendly, gorgeous, and (my personal favorite) stupid simple to use.

I’m also thinking I may now have to reconsider this whole “can’t get no satisfaction” thing.

From the trenches…

“Why is Cloud 9 so amazing? What’s wrong with Cloud 8?” – Mitch Hedberg

Dr. Gregg Alexander, a grunt in the trenches pediatrician at Madison Pediatrics, is Chief Medical Officer for Health Nuts Media, directs the Pediatric Office of the Future exhibit for the American Academy of Pediatrics, and sits on the board of directors of the Ohio Health Information Partnership (OHIP).

News 2/2/12

February 1, 2012 News Comments Off on News 2/2/12

Merge Healthcare announces the addition of six orthopaedic practices utilizing its OrthoEMR and 10 radiology practices using Merge RIS.

ADP, parent company of AdvancedMD, announces the acquisition of RCM company PhyLogic Healthcare. The purchase allows AdvancedMD to offer outsourced medical billing to its PM/EHR clients.

Advanced Data Systems integrates its MedicsDocsAssistant EHR with Midmark’s IQecg, IQspiro, and IQholter devices. Here’s a video showing the integration.

As rumored here a couple weeks ago, Greenway Medical goes public Thursday with an $80 million IPO, providing a market cap of $330 million.

2-1-2012 11-09-22 AM

NexTech VP Christina Majeed accompanies providers from The London Vision Clinic on a medical mission trip to the Tilganga Institute of Ophthalmology in Nepal, where NexTech had donated its EMR system. Majeed and the London Vision Clinic providers trained staff on the EMR, as well as shadowed doctors and observed surgeries.

Louisiana Health Practitioners select ChartLogic EHR Suite for its four-provider practice.

2-1-2012 12-15-28 PM

Kareo opens a sales and customer service office in Indianapolis, managed by Kareo’s national director of sales Jason McDonald. Kareo expects to grow the office from 15 employees to 65 by the end of the year.

University of Kansas researchers look at patient-physician email interactions and find that treatments and lab tests were the most common topics of discussion. Doctors took an average of 23 hours to reply to patients’ emails, suggesting that some physicians place less importance on email as a tool for patient communications.

2-1-2012 12-21-16 PM

First-fill medication adherence improves 10% among physicians who adopt e-prescribing technology, compared to physicians not using e-prescribing.

2-1-2012 12-28-20 PM

The Rural Assistance Center and the National Rural Health Resource Center develop an online toolkit that helps rural healthcare providers find HIT resources, including EHRs.

Though 80% of physicians believe iPads have a promising future in healthcare, most are skeptical of their ability to transform patient care today. Most physicians still use desktop computers as their primary device for accessing patient data, whether at the office, home, or hospital; mobile devices are used primarily when physicians are outside their normal working environments.

2-1-2012 3-19-37 PM

A big welcome to DrFirst, HIStalk Practice’s newest Platinum sponsor. DrFirst is a leader in the standalone e-prescribing market and the first company to establish connections to both RxHub and Surescripts. They are also one of the first companies to offer e-prescribing services for EHR vendors, to provide medication history and electronic prescribing for hospitals, and to transmit prescriptions for controlled substances under a DEA waiver. DrFirst also just introduced its EHR Advisor online tool to help physicians find a solution from those offered by the company’s 200+ EHR vendor partners, all of which are Surescripts certified. The Advisor tool is pretty cool and includes screenshots of different products, downloadable PDFs, and videos. DrFirst is also participating in our Soles4Souls shoe drive at HIMSS and will have a drop-off box (booth 5456) for you to donate your gently used shoes. We appreciate the having DrFirst on board and supporting HIStalk Practice!

Hard to believe, but DrFirst is the 32nd company to sponsor HIStalk Practice. When we launched the site just over three years ago, Mr. H wasn’t sure if enough people would be interested in the ambulatory world to sustain a second site. Today we have over 10,000 readers a month and more than 1,200 subscribers, so I’d like to think Mr. H was wrong (and he’s hardly ever wrong.) Thank you for reading, for telling your HIT ambulatory-loving friends about HIStalk Practice,  and for clicking on a few ads to learn more about the goodies being offered by our sponsors.

2-1-2012 3-46-15 PM

The Austin (TX) newspaper profiles DocBookMD, a three-year old company that offers a mobile app for the secure exchange of texts, photos, charts, and X-rays over mobile devices.  The app is offered for free through 80 “sponsoring” medical societies and used by 5,500 doctors in 20 states.  DocBookMD also just announced its raised $2.2 million from investors.

Inga large

E-mail Inga.

More news: HIStalk, HIStalk Mobile.

HIStalk Practice Interviews Albert Santalo, CEO, CareCloud

February 1, 2012 News 1 Comment

Albert Santalo is chairman, president, and CEO of CareCloud of Miami, FL.

image

Give me some idea about the size of the company, number of employees, revenue, and the number of practices live.

The company is about 120 employees now. We’re managing around $700 million in accounts receivable for clients. We don’t disclose specific revenue numbers, but we’ll be in the $10 million or so range for 2012, anywhere from $8 million to $12 million.


How many practices do you have live?

The number of practices is probably 250 or so. They range in size from solo practitioner to larger, multi-specialty groups. It’s well over 1,000 providers.

Countless companies offer PM and EMR systems and several of those have cloud-based solutions. What’s your competitive differentiator and what companies do you see as your primary competition?

We see lots and lots of companies, and we group them into different categories. Almost every company that’s out there that has had any type of success has started in practice management or medical records and bought another company with the other discipline. Very, very few have built what I would call an industrial strength solution for both sides from the ground up on a common architecture.

When you think about the way a medical practice works, the clinical side is not really separate from the financial and administrative side. The whole thing starts with an appointment. At some point, there’s a handoff to a clinician who uses a medical record system. Then it goes back into the billing process to get the doctor paid for what they do. There’s too many clunky handoffs between these old, fragmented systems.

Most companies just haven’t gone to the trouble to build this all on a common architecture. I would say it’s a subtle differentiator for us because most people don’t really get it. But the reality is that when you look at our system and you see what kind of elegant, beautiful experience it is from cradle to grave, it becomes obvious that this all should be built on a common platform.

Yes, there are a few cloud-based players, but most of them built their systems in the late ‘90s or early 2000s. The Internet-based tools to build these systems have evolved two or three generations later, and that is what we’re using.

For instance, some of our competition only works on Internet Explorer on a Windows PC, while the world has changed in the last few years. A lot of physicians are using Macs — if not at work, in their personal lives. There are mobile devices, and physicians need to be able to access information anywhere. A lot of people don’t like Internet Explorer — they want to use Google Chrome or Firefox or Safari. We built this the way you would build it in the last few years, which is so that it works ubiquitously on any browser.


What companies would you say are your primary competition?

We come across all sorts of existing solutions. We compete with traditional players such as Allscripts, Greenway, NextGen, etc. But at the end of the day, the only company that we really feel sees the world the way we do and has built something like what we are hoping to achieve is athenahealth.


You allude to CareCloud’s slick user interface. Does the user interface offer a sustainable advantage given that these entrenched companies theoretically could freshen up their user interface to resemble yours?

That is an issue, but what I would ask is has anyone really been able to duplicate Apple’s user experience? It’s not like it’s not there and everyone can’t use it. Yet all of the stodgy, old companies struggle to create a user experience like what Apple has created.

One of the things you have to understand about CareCloud is that design is ingrained in our DNA. The first person that I hired when I founded the company was Mike Cuesta, who comes from a graphic design background. In other words, Employee #1 was a designer.

It’s really hard, especially when you’re a bigger company, to get design woven into your culture if it wasn’t already there. Design isn’t something that’s done by consensus. Bigger companies tend to be a little more democratic, for lack of a better word, and committees don’t design well. Design is done by really, really talented designers.

On top of that, some of the technologies that the competition uses are not easily employed in a design type of a way.For instance, if you look at somebody who’s developed in straight-up HTML, you know they have to make the leap to HTML5 to really do rich Internet applications, and the HTML5 development tool kits are not there yet. It’s easier said than done, but the reality is as people are imitating our current designs, we’re already working on the next generation of something even better.


Do you have a sales force?

We do. We’re selling the product through a combination of a traditional sales force and through online marketing. As of late, we’ve been ramping up the sales force pretty significantly. I’m amazed at the amount of people defecting from the old world to come here and deal with something new. I’ve been shocked at the talent that’s been showing up, and we’re hiring them.

We’ve got eight new sales people showing up here Monday for training. That will be the next wave, and there’s a wave after that.

Geographically, they’re located all over?

Throughout the US, everywhere from the northeast to the West Coast.

Any plans to distribute the product through resellers?

Yes. There’s a lot of traditional VARs and such that are out there, and especially with larger installs, we can use help with implementations. In fact, we’re already working with some VARs that are partnering with us to put our solution into their client base.


You recently launched CareCloud Charts. What are the advantages and disadvantages of entering the EMR market late in the game, especially late in the ARRA game?

We could have entered a lot earlier, but we’re big believers that we just have to build things correctly and not rush them too much. You have to always build on a strong foundation.

I would say that the disadvantages are that there have been a lot of people that have purchased the EMR already, but there are also a lot of people that have gotten burned in that process. They’ve been chasing the Meaningful Use dollars and they realize that they made a poor choice in what their EMRs are.

The good news is that they already have bought into the EMR as something they have to do, but a lot of them are looking to swap it out. We’re seeing a lot of that. With our type of solution, which is really pay-as-you-go, it’s a pretty easy transition from a financial perspective, because they don’t have to buy eight servers and do all sorts of creative stuff like with other solutions.

The other about coming late in the game, something that isn’t quite apparent to everybody yet, is most of the EMRs — if not all of the EMRs that have been written and developed up until now — have been developed with the idea that what we’re trying to do is capture the information as it relates to a doctor and a patient seeing each other in a brick-and-mortar type of setting.

The reality is that the world is moving towards much more of a real-time, instrument type of model. We envision that in the not too distant future, people will be wearing sensors. They’ll be stepping on their scale in their home, and that scale will be connected to the Internet, taking their blood pressure, etc.

The way we’ve designed our clinical system is such that it lends itself to this real-time world, where there’s lots and lots of data being captured in real time on specific patients. The system has to provide strong analytics and alerting to the providers so that they’re not inundated with all these data.

It’s a very, very different architecture than what’s out there, especially if you compare it to systems that are written in MUMPS, which is technology from the ‘70s. As you know, this is what you see in healthcare IT. It’s ridiculous. We wouldn’t buy any piece of technology in our personal lives that had anything in it from 1967, yet people are spending tens, hundreds of millions of dollars on systems like Epic, which is crazy.


You’ve said that CareCloud offers a social infrastructure. Explain that.

Think of the social infrastructure like this. When you really look at healthcare, it is a social business. Today, especially with the kind of the fragmented world that we live in on the provider side, a patient bounces around from practice to practice as they’re getting care. A primary care doctor may refer a patient to a cardiologist or urologist, but there isn’t any good infrastructure to push data between these providers.

People talk about HIEs and things like that, but the reality is penetration of HIEs is very low. We’ve built a secure, social framework within our system so that that data is usually pushed from person to person, business to business so that it’s not captured again. It doesn’t infringe on the patient experience, so that errors aren’t introduced. It really speeds up the delivery of care and can help eliminate some of the redundant care that exists.

We think of an HIE as, “Why can’t an HIE be a secure Facebook as opposed to this thing where I have to get my CIO to talk to your CIO?” Guess what? Most doctors don’t even have a CIO. This whole integration between practices and systems is not realistic in ambulatory healthcare. We built it as a friendly place where everyone can interact.

If I use eClinicalWorks or athenahealth, I can access the social infrastructure?

Yes. We’re not there yet in terms of those capabilities, but yes, you will be able to access that infrastructure. Absolutely. And our hope is that you’ll stop using eClinicalWorks. [laughs].

In your various company announcements, you talked a lot about investors, innovation, and awards. You don’t say a lot about customer successes. Who are your notable customers and what have they accomplished using your product?

There are many, many flavors of customers that we have. Some are larger, some are smaller. The successes mostly relate to financial successes. That’s the biggest way that we measure the success around here, that these practices are able to derive more revenue from what they do. Because, as you know, a lot of practices do a lot of work and don’t get paid properly for it.

That’s the first piece, and at the same time, they are able to save on a lot of costs because we convert what’s typically a fixed cost to a variable cost. There are so many bills and this is thrown into our offering that they just do it a lot more effectively and more cheaply.

Your EHR product has been ONC-certified, correct?

Yes.

Have any of your early users been able to attest?

They need to use it meaningfully for 90 days. We’re not there yet, but that’s coming.

As you know, there’s a lot of noise in the system around this whole thing. Although you spoke of the timing earlier, we’re still early in the game in terms of the attestations. You can even see the people that are making a lot of noise, like Practice Fusion. They say they have 100,000-something providers. They only have like 100-and-something providers that have gotten Meaningful Use dollars, which is abysmal, in my opinion.

Any additional thoughts that you’d like to share?

We’re very excited about what’s coming this year. There’s a lot of innovation we’re going to be releasing. We worked very hard in making sure that the EMR was ready for the marketplace, but now, a lot of what happens now that the product is completely rounded out, is a lot of building on top of what we already have. It will be a tremendous amount of refinement. There will be a movement into the mobile space and so forth this year, so it should be pretty exciting.

News 1/31/12

January 30, 2012 News 1 Comment

1-30-2012 4-16-33 PM

Two weeks after the AMA sent a letter to House Speaker John Boehner urging him to stop the implementation of the ICD-10 coding system, the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) tells the healthcare community to keep moving forward on their ICD-10 transition plans. Dan Rode, AHIMA’s VP for advocacy and policy, warns that Congress may not act on the requests of the AMA and others and that stopping implementation would result in “significant financial loss to the healthcare providers, health plans, clearinghouses, technology vendors and the federal government, all who have invested in the transition and have been preparing for the last several years.”

1-30-2012 4-19-00 PM

Allscripts announces plans to incorporate speech and language understanding technology from M*Modal into its ambulatory and acute-care EHR platforms.

1-30-2012 4-21-11 PM

Mendelson/Kornblum Orthopedic and Spine Surgeons (MI) selects SRS EHR for its 37 providers.

A Navicure VP outlines some of the more common problems causing rejections or denials of HIPAA 5010 claims, including:

  • Listing a tax ID or SSN rather than the required NPI
  • Using a PO box instead of a street address (although a PO box can be used as the billing address to receive payment)
  • Not including a nine-digit ZIP code
  • Submitting more than four diagnosis codes for a specific service
  • Not providing a code description when using an unlisted CPT or HCPCS code.

An AMA News article highlights key provisions that providers should consider when contracting for an EMR, including a clear understanding of who owns the clinical data, who can use the data and how, and how data can be accessed, especially in the event a practice and vendor part ways.

1-30-2012 4-23-29 PM

GE Healthcare announces plans to sunset its Centricity Advance product, saying that its flagship EHR/PM solution Centricity Practice Solution addresses similar needs for small and medium practices. GE is giving Centricity Advance clients an option to migrate to a hosted version of Centricity Practice Solution (including data migration, training, and implementation) or to retrieve their data in a read-only format through the end of the year. GE purchased the Advance product (formerly MedPlexus) in March 2010.

Aprima Medical Software partners with DiagnosisOne to provide the latter’s clinical decision support for the former’s HER.

1-30-2012 4-25-49 PM

The Bipartisan Policy Center reports on the state of EMRs and other HIT tools, noting that the lack of health information exchange is a major obstacle, as is the lack of PHR adoption by consumers. The Center’s recommendations include the development of a viable business model that gives providers a financial incentive to share information. To engage consumers, the government is advised to address gaps in privacy, security, and accuracy of records and to take steps to raise awareness of technology; consumer engagement also requires PHRs to become more usable and include easier data import and export tools.

Inga large

E-mail Inga.

DOCtalk by Dr. Gregg 1/27/12

January 27, 2012 News Comments Off on DOCtalk by Dr. Gregg 1/27/12

Have Fun, Make Money, Change the World

Last year at about this same time, I was introduced to Health Care DataWorks (HCD). Located in Columbus, OH, they were a start-up with about 11 employees working in an almost archetypically Spartan start-up office space with programmers all sitting around one large conference table, pounding away on laptops, coding and debugging and trying to build a future.

They invited me back last week to see their new digs – and probably to show off just a bit as they had been having a pretty good go of it since last we met. I had truly enjoyed our first meeting so, as they are geographically near, it wasn’t that hard to decide to drive over.

Economic downturn be damned. HCD apparently hadn’t gotten the news of the economy’s slowdown. They had expanded to some 40 employees. They had moved into a gorgeous new space with real offices, real furniture, lots of lovely lake view windows, plus a company ping pong table. They were even getting ready to knock down some walls to expand yet again.

Of course, that’s all bows and ribbons and wrapping paper. The package inside is what I was interested in.

I’m very happy to say that the folks there had not let the transition from start-up to emerging growth company and their successes against some giants like IBM and Oracle go to their heads. They remained focused, clear, and personable.

Providing “business intelligence solutions that enable healthcare organizations to improve quality and reduce costs”, HCD delivers enterprise data warehouse and research solutions along with hospital and health system analytic dashboards to help improve quality and control costs. Sort of the “Intel inside” for hospitals. Their tools are pretty slick and very comprehensive. As they were recently featured on HIStalk’s Innovator Showcase, you can read more about “the what” there.

Here, I’d like to give just a little more of “the who,” because, if you’re like me, you also want to know about the people behind the scenes of cool tool creation and which way their personal bents bend.

Herb Smaltz is in his first role as a CEO, having lived his prior life in CIO shoes. He is well trained to see the problems he’s trying to help solve. He’s also enjoyable and enthusiastic with an almost child-like awe and joie de vivre. One very enjoyable trait: while he fills his role as the company’s head cheerleader well, he is not so mired in his own world as to miss the view of what might expand it from beyond.

COO Jason Buskirk is their business intelligence (BI) engineer. He’s just as pleasant as Herb, but quiet. He listens intently and seems to gobble up information, speaking rarely. But when he does, it’s with keen and concise insight.

Co-chair and CFO Jeff Wilkins provides a sense of comfortable confidence to the team. His self-assured nature completely avoids any sense of pomposity despite his long track record of corporate success. (Among other things, he founded CompuServe back in the ‘60s and helped open the World Wide Web to us all.) He easily mixes great stories about wild swans and “Henry and Dick” Block with insights into corporate culture and strategies.

They seem to swim in a pool of “I get it.” Not only can they expound upon the values and challenges and solutions within their current laser focus market of BI for large to mid-size hospital systems, but they easily perceive potentials that may be tangential to their foci. I have found this rare. To me, C-suiters seem to more often have an air of “we know best” rather than having a willingness to listen or examine other perspectives (especially when speaking with any lowly non-C-suiters.)

Maybe they’ll gain some proper C-suite arrogance once they move beyond emergence into maturity. But for now, they are the type of people you want to see behind any technology, product, or service you’re considering. (Shhhh… Yes, that’s right. Don’t say anything, and nothing’s firm, but they did hint at some potential tools that would more directly serve the trench grunt world.) Maybe when HCD grows up, they’ll abandon their Pollyanna-esque corporate approach, but I hope not. Personally, it’s one of my favorites, summed up by their Jobs-ian company credo, “Have fun, make money, change the world.”

Makes a geeky American capitalist smile.

From the trenches…

“I would trade all of my technology for an afternoon with Socrates.” – Steve Jobs

Dr. Gregg Alexander, a grunt in the trenches pediatrician at Madison Pediatrics, is Chief Medical Officer for Health Nuts Media, directs the Pediatric Office of the Future exhibit for the American Academy of Pediatrics, and sits on the board of directors of the Ohio Health Information Partnership (OHIP).

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