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From MGMA 10/14/09

October 13, 2009 News 2 Comments

mgma center

What is missing from this picture? If you guessed a crush of people, you are correct! I took this shot in the early afternoon, while most attendees were hunkered down in the educational sessions. Admittedly, during the breaks, attendees made their way to the exhibit hall. Attendees were offered a free lunch and had to walk to the back of the exhibit hall to reach the food, so that obviously gave traffic a boost.

Speaking of the free lunch: like a free EMR, free isn’t always cheap enough. Barbeque sandwiches and corn on the cob. I pitied an exhibitor who had barbeque sauce splash all over her white shirt. I’m sure it was plenty tasty, but it looked a bit too messy and was not what my palate had in mind.

The best session I sat in was “HITECH Action Plan: EHR Incentive Payments and Practical Implementation Issues.” Rosemarie Nelson, who is a principal at MGMA Health Care Consulting Group and an obviously seasoned presenter, offered straightforward advice for administrators looking to move to EHR and qualify for stimulus funds. Some of the tidbits were very simple, but perhaps not something every practice knows: standardize over customize, get a lawyer to review your EHR contract, find a non-techie doctor to be a champion. Her co-presenter was attorney David Schoolcraft, who also supplied good commentary. Based on the questions from the audience, it’s obvious there is still a lot of confusion about what it will take to get stimulus funds. And, I would guess the majority of people in that room (maybe 300?) did not have an EMR in place. In an attempt to stress urgency and warn practices that meaningful use won’t happen overnight, Nelson pointed out that going to EMR was a bit like have a baby: no matter how hard you try, it still takes nine months.

I noticed that sessions that covered financial strategies were packed. I didn’t sit in any, but obviously the money side of the practice is a top priority for administrators at the moment.

nextgen screen

I know I mentioned this already, but NextGen has a cool-looking booth. I said spaceship before, but I am changing that to space station. And I was mesmerized by the screen used by the demo guy. (Sorry the above picture is a bit blurry. I was trying to be sly and I didn’t get up quite close enough.) The screen is just like an iPhone and totally touch screen. I have seen them before, but I have to say that anyone a little bit techie can be easily sucked into watching just because the technology is so fun.

A reader sent a note informing me that I should have named the MED3OOO guys to the best dressed list. They had some sort of “come bond with us” theme and all the guys were dressed up in tuxes, a la James Bond. I also noticed a couple of Bond girls (the kind Mr. H would appreciate).

Futurist Mark Anderson helped sponsor the Digital Physician Educational Pavilion, which got screwed with a lousy booth location. The premise was to have two different communities set up and demonstrate interoperability, including how practices with different EMRs can connect via an HIE application. It looked like about 10 different vendors participated. However, their space was past all the regular booths, and not even near where they were serving the free lunch. It’s too bad because it had the potential to be a great educational tool for participants.

bear

As I reflect on what I learned over the last couple of days, I fear that a lot of practices are not going to be ready for 2011 stimulus money — and that may be a conscious choice on their part. The money incentives and penalties may not be enough to effect change. And, doctors may not finding the products that allow them to maintain productivity, regardless of effect on quality of care. There are still plenty of seemingly successful vendors that are pushing products that automate some processes that aren’t full-blown EMRs, and they’ll continue to have some short-term success. With the current economic environment and uncertainty in healthcare legislation, practices are going to be holding their pocketbooks close for a little bit longer. If a practice has the money and inclination for change, there is plenty of innovative technology (from some of the  big-name players as well as lots of little guys).  No doubt it’s still a pretty dynamic and exciting time to be in HIT.

inga

E-mail Inga.

From MGMA 10/13/09

October 13, 2009 News 1 Comment

Mr. H chastised me last night for not providing adequate trinket and fashion updates, so I’ll start out with the really important  stuff.

Fashion: a lot of function over fashion, especially given how sprawling the convention center is. Thankfully ,there are some golf carts (sponsored by RelayHealth, I believe) that will take you from one end of the center to the other. However, a few brave souls would make my mother proud and have worn some stylin’ pumps. I think I saw particularly lovely pair at either the eClinicalWorks or Sage booth.

trinket

Trinkets: I am looking over my stash of goodies collected yesterday. The pocket-size Sudoku game, courtesy of MPV, should be fun. The horse beanie baby was from Zirmed (they are based in Lexington, hence the horse theme). The wad of money pictured above is actually a tightly wrapped tee shirt with a $1,000,000 bill on the cover (the lady at Intuit booth told me I’d look like a million bucks in the shirt). The exercise tube from IntegrityRehabGroup doubles as a water balloon launcher (you can never have too many of those.)

In addition to all the goodies I picked up, there are far more items that I have failed to win, such as iPods, iPod Touches, a Caribbean cruise (courtesy of Capario), a car (from Navicure), and a Tiffany’s necklace (a transcription service – don’t recall the name).

srs booth

Monday afternoon I noticed a three-deep crowd in front of the SRSsoft booth and was impressed that so many people wanted a demo. Turns out they were giving out $500 and you had to be present to win (I didn’t win, but a very excited woman was being hit up to take her crowd to dinner.)

I’ve asked many folks for their impression of the meeting thus far, and what they think the buzz is. The down economy seems to be a big concern, with practices feeling the crunch more than ever (lower reimbursements, lower patient volumes, higher overhead). Vendors have said that, unlike years past, they don’t have people asking for demonstrations with the intent to actually make a purchase decision in the near term. The EMR vendors especially have mentioned this. On the other hand, several vendors claim the best thing about the meeting is the opportunity to network with other vendors. I saw perhaps half a dozen booths that had a vendor name displayed but the vendor was a no-show. Sign of the economic times, I suppose.

I did see some new technology worth a mention. Last month Intuit announced the launch of Quicken Health Bill Pay and yesterday Allscripts announced it signed on as a reseller. Essentially Intuit pulls A/R data from a practice’s system and as soon as a patient owes money, they are sent an e-mail. The patient can click on the e-mail to find easy-to-understand details on what is owed, what insurance paid, and what procedures were done. Then, they can pay online. The service is $25/doctor/month. It’s very user-friendly, in the same way Quicken or Turbo Tax is. Good stuff.

McKesson is announcing today Bright Note Technology, which works with their ambulatory EMR products to help populate the chart note. The aspect that sounds particularly intriguing is that it works with Dragon Naturally Speaking and actually translates the dictation into searchable patient data. I’m heading over to the Nuance booth this afternoon to check it out.

I also looked at a product called Shareable Ink, which is a new company started by PatientKeeper co-founder Stephen Hau. Their product uses a digital pen to capture billing and EHR data on a printed form. Using wireless or Bluetooth technology, the data can then be uploaded into a billing or EHR system. I think the product has the potential to be a hit with specialties such as anesthesia and ER, where doctors are still clinging to their paper records.

Off to check out some educational sessions this a.m. By the way, if you see one of the HIStalk sponsor signs, please be sure to tell the vendor thanks for their support!

inga

E-mail Inga.

From MGMA 10/12/09

October 12, 2009 News Comments Off on From MGMA 10/12/09

I arrived in Denver late Sunday afternoon. Fortunately, the snow from Saturday had all melted away.

I arrived at the convention center in time to hear Ezekiel Emanual, MD, PhD, the bioethics chair for the NIH and a senior advisor at the White House OMB on health policy. His talk focused on the need for the industry to move towards high-touch medicine, e.g., spending more time with patients, better care coordination, etc. Once we get the payment system figured out, the high-touch model will lead to lower costs. Not too much original stuff, but he was an engaging speaker.

I then hit the opening reception, which seemed pretty well attended (as happens most any time you provide free drinks). I was never quite sure what the theme was, but there were a couple women on tall stilts dressed as birch trees (I couldn’t get a shot without looking too conspicuous, darn it).

Monday morning I walked though about half the exhibit floors. Vendors said that Sunday was pretty slow, but busier today. Official total attendance, by the way, is about 4,500, including 2,150 paid attendees. MGMA says the numbers are down 21% from last year, which is similar to what other associations are seeing.

Thank you, Eclipsys, for being the first booth I saw displaying an HIStalk sponsorship sign! I did notice that SRSsoft also had the magnets available to hand out. I personally think they are a must-have souvenir, so stop by the booths of our sponsors to pick one up.

By far the busiest booth seems to be the MGMA bookshop. Who would have thunk?

NextGen has the same booth they had at HIMSS, which is this modern, almost spaceship-looking thing with cool lights. I’ll try to take a picture. GE has a very large space that looked a bit empty. The problem with a big space is that if it is not crowded, it really looks empty.  If you have a good location, maybe a small booth is not a bad thing. It’s a lot easier to look crowded and make others wonder what the buzz is all about.

Speaking of buzz, I haven’t heard much of any so far, although perhaps I did hear MGMA’s thoughts on what practices are doing as it relates to EHR/meaningful use/ARRA. MGMA thinks that perhaps 75% of its members do not have EHRs yet. Many are sitting on the sidelines waiting for more clarification on meaningful use.

I was surprised to learn that many practices really don’t understand how the whole stimulus funding process works. Seems to be some confusion that you have to buy an EHR out of pocket, install it, and then prove meaningful use, rather than simply apply for grant money up front.

And, even though you would expect the whole ARRA/EHR issue to be what the buzz is all about, at least at this conference, the RCM vendors are still getting their share of booth traffic.

More updates to come.

E-mail Inga.

Going to MGMA? Visit Our HIStalk and HIStalk Practice Sponsors

October 9, 2009 News Comments Off on Going to MGMA? Visit Our HIStalk and HIStalk Practice Sponsors

Allscripts
Booth 933
222 Merchandise Mart
Suite 2024
Chicago, IL 60654-1034
Phone:919.329.1070
www.allscripts.com
Allscripts uses innovation technology to bring health to healthcare. More than 160,000 physicians, 800 hospitals and nearly 8,000 post-acute and homecare organizations utilize Allscripts award-winning offerings like electronic health records and revenue cycle management solutions to improve the health of their patients and their bottom line.

Culbert Healthcare Solutions Inc
Booth 642
800 West Cummings Park
Suite 6000
Woburn, MA 01801
Phone:781.935.1002 ext. 13
www.culberthealth.com
Culbert Healthcare Solutions is a professional services firm serving healthcare organizations in the areas of operations management, revenue cycle, clinical transformation and information technology.  CHS Consultants act as trusted advisors to group practices and academic medical centers seeking to improve patient care, enhance the patient experience and drive financial performance. Stop by the booth to register to win an iPhone with a 1 year subscription!

eClinicalWorks LLC
Booth 2023
112 Turnpike Road
Suite 200
Westborough, MA 01581
Phone:508.836.2700
Fax:508.836.4466
www.eclinicalworks.com
eClinicalWorks® unified EMR/PM solution manages patient flow and streamlines processes for customers in all 50 states regardless of practice size, specialty and number of locations. Its products extend the use of electronic health records beyond practice walls with the latest technologies and create community-wide records.

Eclipsys Corporation
Booth 1739
Three Ravinia Drive
Atlanta, GA 30346
Phone:404-847-5000
www.eclipsys.com
Eclipsys is a leading provider of advanced integrated clinical, revenue cycle, and performance management software, clinical content and professional services that help healthcare organizations improve clinical, financial, operational and client satisfaction outcomes. Whether independent or hospital-owned, Eclipsys PeakPractice™ helps improve patient care with an integrated EMR/PM solution.

Greenway Medical Technologies
Booth 1233
121 Greenway Boulevard
Carrollton, GA 30117
Phone:770.836.3100
Fax:770.836.3200
www.greenwaymedical.com
Greenway Medical Technologies is a leading provider of single database electronic health record (EHR), practice management and interoperability solutions and on-demand services for physician practices and hospital community EHR strategies. Greenway’s 08 CCHIT Certified EHR solution, PrimeSuite® 2008, streamlines a practice’s clinical, financial and administrative processes.

Henry Schein
Booth 1725
135 Duryea Rd.
Melville, NY 11747
Phone:631.390.8000
www.henryschein.com
Henry Schein Medical is the largest distributor of healthcare products and services to office-based practitioners. We offer more than 90,000 brand and Henry Schein Brand items in stock. In addition we provide practice solutions from financing, EMR/PMR, to equipment leasing, repair and total office warranty coverage.

McKesson
Booth 717
5995 Windward Parkway
Alpharetta, GA 30005
Phone: 404.338.3807
Fax: 404-338-5121
www.mckesson.com
McKesson delivers solutions across all care settings; providing  physicians with more products, services, and resources than any other healthcare company – including practice management systems and EHR, billing and accounts receivable management and connectivity services, medical supplies and equipment, and pharmaceuticals.

MED3OOO
Booth 1249
680 Andersen Drive
Foster Plaza 10
Pittsburgh, PA 15220
Phone:412.937.8887
Fax:412.937.9221
www.MED3OOO.com
MED3OOO, experts in healthcare management and information technology, advances performance of group medical practices, clinics, and hospital-employed physicians with RCM and ASP PMIEHR systems. Stop by our booth for a demonstration of our InteGreat EHR the intuitive browser-based solution. Put your group ahead of the curve, and visit
www.MED3OOO.com.

MedAptus
Booth 1107
176 Federal Street
4th Floor
Boston, MA 02110
Phone:617.896.4000
Fax:617.482.1110
www.medaptus.com
With the most powerful, yet easy-to-use, Intelligent Charge Capture technologies available, MedAptus enjoys enterprisewide adoption at many prestigious, academic healthcare organizations. Our full-scale Professional and Facility offerings increase revenue, re-engineer archaic processes, enhance EMR investments and save busy providers time.

NextGen Healthcare
Booth 1533
795 Horsham Road
Horsham, PA 19644
Phone:215.795.1050
www.nextgen.com
NextGen Healthcare is a leading provider of electronic health record (EHR) and enterprise practice management (EPM) systems, plus revenue cycle management services. With full connectivity solutions and a patient portal, NextGen products support over 25 medical specialties, making it ideal for the small or mid-size practices or the multi-provider enterprise.

Nuance
Booth 535
One Wayside Rd
Burlington, MA 01803
Phone:781.565.5000
www.nuance.com/healthcare
Nuance’s healthcare solutions optimize clinical workflow, reduce transcription expense, raise standards of care via more thorough documentation, deliver results rapidly, and heighten clinician satisfaction by making EHR systems easy to use. These solutions accelerate the adoption of clinical information systems, so provider organizations can maximize the return from IT investments.

PatientKeeper
Booth 907
275 Washington Street
2nd Floor
Newton, MA 02458
Phone:617.987.0300
www.patientkeeper.com
Only PatientKeeper is designed to support a physician throughout the entire day, across all settings of care—both inpatient and at the office. PatientKeeper’s applications allow physicians to access electronic medical records, clinical results, capture charges, write prescriptions, document encounters, and more—anywhere, from any device.

RelayHealth
Booth 2017

1145 Sanctuary Parkway
Suite 200
Alpharetta, GA 30004
Phone:510.637.7722
www.relayhealth.com
RelayHealth streamlines clinical, administrative and financial interactions between patients, physicians, hospitals, pharmacies and payors, helping them collaborate to improve the quality of care and reduce administrative costs. Visit the RelayHealth booth to learn more about utilizing Health Information Exchange, clinical and financial connectivity and pharmacy solutions to increase your revenue and productivity while reducing costs. Also, check out the session “Patient/Provider Connectivity: Leading the Transformation of Healthcare Delivery.” David K. Nace, MD, Chair of the McKesson Clinical Council, will discuss how the uninsured, higher co-pays and consumer-directed plans are changing the dynamics of the physician economic relationship. RelayHealth is the exclusive sponsor of the Conference Express (trolley that moves attendees in the Convention Center between sessions and the exhibit hall).

SRSsoft
Booth 1207
95 Chestnut Ridge Road
Montvale, NJ 07645
Phone:201.802.1300
Fax:201.802.1301
www.srssoft.com
SRS makes innovative, sophisticated digital technology practical for high-volume, practices. The award-winning SRS hybrid EMR offers powerful, flexible solutions to the complexities of clinical workflows, patient care, and practice operations. Stop by the booth to register for your chance to win $500 cash!

News 10/8/09

October 7, 2009 News Comments Off on News 10/8/09

From Axing Al: “Re: MGMA and the Integrated Digital Physician Educational Pavilion. You’ll want to check out the Integrated Community EHR demonstration site in the exhibit hall. The AC Group is sponsoring it.”  The demonstration is to include two communities and total of six different physician practices using six different forms of clinical documentation, including CCHIT-certified EHRs, hybrids, and DRT-enabled documentation. I’ll definitely be stopping by.

srs nemo

From Evan Steele:Re: trinkets and logos. I hope you will stop by the SRS booth and stock up on the SRS Nemo fish. This is a perennial favorite among conference attendees. Also, our booth graphics this year consists solely of a collage of 106 client logos on a 20-foot-wide by 8-foot-high display. We believe that no other vendor in the conference hall can confidently display this many happy client logos at their booth. Please stop by and take a look.” Thanks, Evan. One can never have too many Nemo fish.

Aprima Medical Software (originally iMedica) partners with Intelligent Medical Objects (IMO) to offer IMO’s medical code and terminology mappings, as well as its vocabulary products, to clients.

Blue Shield of California makes $29.6 million available for pay-for-performance bonuses. Medical groups and IPAs can qualify by demonstrating the performance of quality care using such measures as diabetes care, patient experience, managing ER visits, and deployment of IT.

Provider’s Choice Medical Billing, a billing service serving 170 physician offices, selects HealthFusion as its clearinghouse and claims provider.

Two-thirds of providers think that adopting new technologies will improve patient care. At least that is the opinion of IT companies serving healthcare providers. I suppose that IT companies do have conversations with clients to understand why they are adopting new IT, which gives the survey some validity. Over 80% of the providers using electronic records claim they added EMR to improve patient care, save time, and improve efficiencies.

CCHIT announces that vendors and developers can start applying for modular certification programs focused on meeting meaningful use requirements. The Preliminary ARRA 2011 program is limited to meaningful use standards spelled out in the ARRA legislation and will provide a certification label identifying which objectives the EHR technology supports. CCHIT is also launching its 2011 Certification program.

Routine use of electronic health records can improve the quality of preventive care and help manage chronic disease in primary care practices, according to a primary care study.

flu

Microsoft enters the H1N1 scene (months after Google) and introduces a new Web site designed to help people assess their need for medical attention. The site is based on the triage procedure used at Emory University. I talked a sick friend through the short assessment and, based on her symptoms, we told informed she might be “very sick” and needed to call her doctor “now!” (Interestingly, she had chatted with the doctor’s nurse, who told her it sounded like H1N1 and the best thing for her was to stay home, drink fluids, and call back if symptoms got worse.) I suspect if the masses read enough messages like the one above, hospitals will be forced to invest in more tents to treat flu patients.

More details emerge about the laptop stolen from the car of a BCBS employee. Officials now say the laptop had a file that contained identifying information for every physician in the country that has a contract with a Blues-affiliated insurance plan. The names, addresses, tax IDs, and NPI numbers for about 850,000 doctors were compromised. Of those, about 187,000 use their Social Security number as their tax ID or NPI number. A BCBS official calls it “an unfortunate mistake.”

radianse

Physicians with Massachusetts General Hospital’s outpatient clinics are trying to reduce wait times using new active-tag RFID technology. Patients are asked to wear a wrist coil with a tag and clinicians click on the tags as patients move through the clinic. The process is more efficient that manual tracking and patients are compliant with the process when told it is helping doctors to find ways to spend time providing better care. I guess. But seems kind of big brother-ish, doesn’t it?

The use of smart phones by physicians is expected to increase from 64% today to 81% by 2012. A more “mature” and proficient physician audience will emerge and the Internet will become physicians’ primary professional resource. Look for physicians to use their smart phones for everything from administrative tasks to patient monitoring.

At this week’s Health 2.0 conference, various start-up companies showed off new technologies to change the way doctors and patients interact. For example, Hello Health is a service practices can use to communicate with patients. The company claims it can decrease the number of receptionists and nurses by half. VisionTree gives patients the ability to complete medical histories online, request prescription refills, and make appointments over the Web. RelayHealth offers doctors and patients the ability to communicate online and share health information. Physician can also write electronic prescriptions and share information with other doctors. AAFP advisor David Kibbe predicts that eventually providers will need a single platform that can all use, rather than a variety of different applications.

The Mafia is increasingly taking part in Medicare fraud because of the easy money and shorter prison terms relative to other crimes. Scammers focus on billing Medicare for medical equipment and drugs that patients never received or needed. Medicare fraud can net at least $25,000 a day while risking a relatively modest 10 years in prison if convicted on a single count. Much faster money than dealing cocaine, which carries the risk of life in prison. I see a TV series waiting to be made.

inga

E-mail Inga.

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