Google’s personal health record marches on

Posted by Robert Lowes on June 18th, 2008. Filed under: EHR, , .

The federal government wants to build a national network for health data, but Google already has a nascent network in place in the form of its free personal health record called Google Health. Last week this private-sector network got a little bigger when Blue Cross Blue Shield of Massachusetts announced that its members will be able to import claims data into a Google Health account beginning this fall. The Bay State Blues is the first insurer to integrate electronically with Google, and it joins a growing list of other healthcare organizations—ranging from Walgreens Pharmacy to the Cleveland Clinic—that feed patient data into the Google PHR.

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Pharmacy industry uses patients to pressure doctors to e-prescribe

Posted by Robert Lowes on May 2nd, 2008. Filed under: e-prescribing, .

Maybe you’ve seen the signs at your local pharmacy saying “E-prescriptions filled here” and “Give your prescription a head start” They’re part of a campaign to encourage patients to convert their doctors to electronic prescribing.

The organization behind the campaign is SureScripts, a company created by the pharmacy industry to promote e-prescribing. That’s technically defined as a prescription that goes directly from the doctor’s computer to the pharmacy’s computer (faxed prescriptions don’t meet the definition). SureScripts estimates that more than 40,000 pharmacies have computer systems capable of receiving e-prescriptions. The bulk of these pharmacies are in national chains such as Walgreens or part of discount retailers such as Wal-Mart. SureScripts operates a nationwide data exchange that connects these pharmacies to doctors who use compatible e-prescribing software.

The e-prescribing signs started appearing in pharmacies on April 29. The one that states “Give your prescription a head start” adds “Ask your doctor for an e-prescription” and invites customers to a SureScripts-sponsored website. Besides explaining the benefits of this technology, the website asks “Does your doctor e-prescribe?” By clicking on the question, a visitor can then enter his ZIP code and find out whether his doctor appears on a list of area e-prescribers. If his name isn’t there, the website invites the visitor to print a flyer about e-prescribing that he can give to his doctor.

Assuming that patients buy into e-prescribing, a lot of flyers could get printed. Only six percent of physicians have the kind of software that can transmit prescriptions electronically to pharmacies, according to SureScripts.

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The revolving door of healthcare IT

Posted by Robert Lowes on April 29th, 2008. Filed under: technology, .

Internist David Brailer used to be the point man for the Bush administration in its push to build a nationwide health information network. He’s now the chairman of a private-equity firm with more money to invest in healthcare IT—$700 million—than he had at his command back in his federal days.

Those big bucks are hitting the marketplace. Brailer’s firm, Health Evolution Partners, announced on April 28 that it was investing an undisclosed amount of money in an electronic prescribing company called Prematics. Various health plans have rolled out Prematics’ e-prescribing service—including wireless hand-held computers—for participating physicians to use free of charge.

As part of the deal, Brailer will join the Prematics board of directors and hobnob with some other Beltway public servants who have migrated to private industry. Two members of the company’s executive council are former Health and Human Services Secretary Tommie Thompson and former Sen. John Breaux (D) from Louisiana.

Health Evolution Partners is channeling money to Prematics through an investment fund called the Health Evolution Partners Innovation Network. Four well-connected physicians serve as HEPIN advisors: Former Surgeon General and general surgeon Richard H. Carmona, preventive medicine specialist David M. Lawrence, former chairman and CEO of Kaiser Permanente; psychiatrist Arnold Milstein, co-founder of The Leapfrog Group; and preventive medicine specialist Molly J. Coye, founder and CEO of The Health Technology Center.

Brailer headed the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, a branch of HHS, from May 2004 to April 2006.

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Fewer certified EHR programs could mean higher prices

Certified EHRs are supposed to be the best, and the kind the feds want you to buy, but the number of programs attaining this status has tailed off big-time.

EHR certification is part of the federal push for a nationwide health information network. The US Department of Health and Human Services contracts with a private group called the Certification Commission for Healthcare Information Technology to certify EHR programs that can perform basic tasks such as creating and displaying problem lists, checking for drug interactions, and issuing reminders about overdue tests. The feds won’t let a hospital subsidize an EHR for you unless it has this stamp of approval.

Ninety programs were certified under the initial set of standards that CCHIT issued in 2006. However, CCHIT introduces new and tougher standards each year. That may explain why only 24 programs have been certified so far based on 2007 CCHIT criteria. The organization is still processing 27 applications that came in by the March 31 deadline for certification based on last year’s standards. However, even if all of them are approved, the total number of programs certified as meeting the 2007 criteria would only come to 51.

One key reason for the fall-off is the CCHIT requirement introduced in 2007 for electronic prescribing, says Mark Anderson, CEO of AC Group, a healthcare IT consulting firm in Montgomery, TX. “A lot of vendors don’t have this,” says Anderson, who notes that true e-prescribing is not merely faxing an Rx to a pharmacy, but transmitting it on a computer-to-computer basis. Anderson predicts that vendors will have an even harder time meeting the proposed criteria for 2008, which require EHRs, among other things, to be able to swap patient medical summaries with each other.

Adding such features to an EHR can translate into hundreds of thousands of dollars in programming costs for a vendor. In light of this expense, only the biggest and most well-heeled companies will be able to keep up with ever changing CCHIT criteria. “I think only 27 vendors will be able to pass this next set,” says Anderson.

EHR vendors lacking certified products probably won’t survive in the marketplace, says Anderson, who expects the number of EHR vendors to decline from roughly 390 today to less than 50 in 2012. While a smaller field of vendors simplifies shopping for an EHR, it also will raise prices, he notes.

Many doctors consider EHRs already too pricey. The average cost for nine programs certified under the 2007 CCHIT criteria was close to $30,000 per doctor over three years, according to a recent study by AC Group.

CCHIT spokesperson Sue Reber says another reason for the decline in certified programs is that since certification is good for three years, some vendors in the CCHIT class of 2006 may wait until 2009 before they reapply. Nevertheless, CCHIT is pleased with the number of vendors that have sought certification under the 2007 criteria, says Reber. “Vendors see certification as a competitive necessity.”

[Via Medical Economics’ InfoTech Bulletin]

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If hackers find government computers easy pickings, what about those in healthcare?

Posted by Robert Lowes on April 18th, 2008. Filed under: computers, , .

Cyber attacks on U.S. government computers are mushrooming in number, according to the April 10 cover story of BusinessWeek, and that doesn’t bode well for the security of patient data stored in the computers maintained by doctors and hospitals.

The article, titled “The New E-spionage Threat,” describes how the latest techniques to infiltrate computer networks and harvest sensitive information are “rendering traditional defenses—firewalls and updated antivirus software—virtually useless.” BusinessWeek reports that much of this high-tech spying can be traced back to foreign governments, namely China (which has denied the charge).

Computer spying represents a new form of asymmetrical warfare. “You don’t need an Army, a Navy, an Air Force to beat the U.S,” a US Air Force general is quoted as saying. “You can be a peer force for the price of the PC on my desk.”

Hospitals, doctors, and insurers should be just as alarmed about their own computer defenses.

The New E-spionage Threat [Via BusinessWeek]

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HHS continues push for EHR adoption

Posted by Helen Lippman on April 17th, 2008. Filed under: EHR, , .

Federal health officials came to New Jersey recently to push a plan that would encourage doctors to adopt electronic medical records as a way of improving patient care, The Star-Ledger reports. Under the government’s five-year demonstration program, as many as 1,200 primary care practices nationwide would receive financial incentives to embrace the technology, Deputy Health and Human Services Secretary Tevi Troy said during a stop at Rutgers University’s Newark campus.

Doctors urged to adopt electronic record-keeping [Via The Star-Ledger]

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Pennsylvania creates health information exchange

Posted by Wayne Guglielmo on April 2nd, 2008. Filed under: technology, .

It’s one thing to get physicians in private practice to adopt electronic solutions for handling their healthcare information. It’s quite another to make it possible for these individual providers to exchange data with one another, as well as with hospitals, labs, and pharmacies. But an initiative announced last week by Pennsylvania Gov. Edward G. Rendell aims to do just that. The Pennsylvania Health Information Exchange, as it’s known, promises to give health care providers improved access to clinical data. It also promises to lead to safer and more efficient patient-centered care. Learn more about the initiative, which is part of the Governor’s Prescription for Pennsylvania health care reform plan.

Pennsylvania Creates Health Information Exchange [Via Government Technology]

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A tool that helps you sniff out EHR snoops

Posted by Robert Lowes on March 28th, 2008. Filed under: EHR, , , , , .

The case of entertainer Britney Spears and her peeked-at digital chart illustrates the value of an EHR audit trail.

Earlier this month, the Los Angeles Times reported that UCLA Medical Center was set to fire at least 13 employees and suspend six more for perusing the electronic record of the pop star during a recent psychiatric hospitalization. Six physicians also got in trouble for taking an unauthorized look. continues…

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Certification doesn’t mean much to most small practices

Posted by Robert Lowes on March 27th, 2008. Filed under: EHR, , , , , .

Certifying EHRs is supposed to help doctors pick the best products. But small medical practices generally don’t put much stock in this stamp of approval, according to KLAS, a firm that researches healthcare information technology.

The federal Department of Health and Human Services contracts with the Certification Commission for Healthcare Information Technology—a private industry group—to certify EHRs that meet criteria deemed fundamental for digital medicine. So far, CCHIT has blessed more than 90 programs. continues…

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What the Allscripts-Misys marriage means to you

Posted by Robert Lowes on March 26th, 2008. Filed under: EHR, , , .

Your choice of EHRs is slowly narrowing down as the number of vendors shrinks. That makes shopping easier.

The merger of Allscripts and Misys Healthcare, announced March 18, is one more sign of EHR industry consolidation as vendors acquire each other or fall by the wayside. Right now, there are almost 390 companies in this market, according to Mark Anderson, president of the AC Group, a healthcare IT firm in Montgomery, TX. “I see less than 50 in 2012,” says Anderson. “If you’re not a strong vendor, you won’t survive” continues…

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