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Edition
Thirteen (4/28/09)


Senate Set to Confirm
Sebelius as Health Secretary
Miami
Herald, 4/28/09
The Senate was set to approve President Obama's nominee
for health and human services secretary Tuesday, giving
the agency a leader in the midst of the swine flu
outbreak. Morning debate and an afternoon vote were
scheduled to confirm Kathleen Sebelius, the two-term
Democratic governor of Kansas. She was expected to get
the 60 votes needed in the Democratic-led Senate, though
perhaps with little margin to spare.
Bipartisan Bill
Would Increase Access to Telemedicine
The Times-Standard, 4/28/09
The Medicare Telehealth Enhancement Act, House Resolution
2068, would expand Medicare reimbursement to telemedicine
facilities in urban and suburban areas. The bill would
also provide $30 million in grant funding for healthcare
organizations.
Making the
Business Case for HIT
HealthLeaders, 4/28/09
Chief information officers are not always a member of the
CEO's inner circle. In fact, only a quarter (25.23%) of
CEOs listed a CIO as members of their senior executive
team, according to the 2009 HealthLeaders Media Industry
Survey. But the passage of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 may have just elevated their
position. The federal government's $36 billion incentive
package to install electronic health records means that
more CIOs will report directly to the CEO and help set
the strategy of the organization.
Reform Means
Leaner Hospitals
HealthLeaders, 4/28/09
Attendees at the 40th annual membership meeting of the
American Hospital Association in Washington were assured
that health care reform is on track on Capitol Hill. But
the message underlying that prediction is somewhat
bittersweet: Hospitals are likely facing a future with a
new definition of success that entails "doing less
but producing greater results for patients," said
AHA President and CEO Rich Umbdenstock at the opening
session.
HIMSS Defines 'Meaningful
Use' of EHRs
Health Data Management, 4/28/09
The Healthcare Information Management and Systems Society
has released two definitions for "meaningful use"
of certified electronic health records technology under
the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act. The
definitions cover meaningful use in hospitals and
physician practices. HIMSS has sent its definitions to
the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services and the
Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology for consideration as the government develops
the formal definitions.
Senator: EHR
Grants to Safety-Net Providers
Health Data Management, 4/27/09
Sen. Jay Rockefeller (D-W.Va.) has introduced legislation
to make federal electronic health records software
available to safety-net providers, particularly those in
small, rural facilities. The Institute of Medicine
defines safety-net providers as those delivering a
significant level of health care and other health-related
services to the uninsured, Medicaid, and other vulnerable
patients.
Commentary: Five
Myths on Health Care's Electronic Fix-it
The Washington Post, 4/26/09
Tevi Troy, deputy secretary of the Department of Health
and Human Services from 2007-2009, provides his thoughts
on what he says are common health I.T. myths. Troy
questions whether the $20 billion for EHRs in the
stimulus package is worth the risk.
AHRQ Readies E-Prescribing
Tool
Health Data Management, 4/24/09
The Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality has
contracted with the Rand Corporation, Santa Monica, Calif.,
to develop a toolset for implementing electronic
prescribing systems. The toolset will be a "how to"
guide for implementing e-prescribing across various
provider settings, according to a notice AHRQ published
April 24 in the Federal Register.
Heres a Meaningful Use Tip
Health Data Management, 4/24/09
Hospitals that want to make an educated guess on how the
federal government will define meaningful use
of electronic health records under the economic stimulus
package can use an existing benchmark, one expert says.
They can refer to the qualifications for earning Stage 4
on the seven-level rating system of hospital EHR
functionality from HIMSS Analytics, a Chicago-based
research firm.
Hearing on Meaningful Use Slated
Health Data Management, 4/24/09
The National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics
will hold a public meeting April 28 and 29 in Washington
to discuss a definition for meaningful use of
electronic health records under the economic stimulus
program. The two-day meeting of the NCVHC executive
subcommittee will feature 10 panel discussions with a
variety of speakers.
Report: Change EHR Priorities
Health Data Management, 4/24/09
Hospitals should consider changing their priorities when
implementing electronic health records, automating
documentation of physicians notes earlier in the
game, a new report suggests. The change in priorities
would help hospitals provide adequate data for core
measures that many payers demand, according to a
new white paper from Computer Sciences Corp., a Falls
Church, Va.-based consulting firm. The report also says
hospitals should speed their efforts to document
medication reconciliation to provide complete information
on medications for use in core measure reporting.
PHI Security: Move Backward, Look Forward
HealthLeaders, 4/24/09
Thanks to HHS, we now know what "unsecured protected
health information" means. So where do we go from
here? If you're leading an organization that handles
protected health information (PHI), you may be asking
that question today. HHS issued a proposal for security
breach notification in a 20-page report that defines
acceptable conditions for covered entities and business
associates to encrypt or destroy their private patient
data to secure PHI and prevent a breach.
U.S. Launching $1.1 Billion Study of Which
Medical Therapies Work
Chicago Tribune, 4/24/09
Gaps in medical knowledge are getting new attention as
the federal government prepares to invest $1.1 billion in
"comparative effectiveness" research and
evaluate potential therapies head-to-head. The Institute
of Medicine is reviewing priorities for this type of
research and preparing to issue recommendations this
summer. A new 15-member panel overseeing the government's
initiative has been asking for public input. The hope is
that by identifying which treatments are most effective,
doctors and patients will make better-informed decisions
and avoid therapies that don't measure up.
Lifetime EHR Could Mean Better Health Care for
Veterans
HealthLeaders, 4/23/09
When Deb Howard, 42, of Kingwood, TX was discharged from
the military in 1992, she was given eight years' worth of
her paper medical records in two tattered and worn out
folders. And although the records include valuable health
information, including every illness with which she had
been diagnosed and every drug for which she had been
prescribed during her military career, she says she has
no idea where those records are now.
The Change Health Care Needs
Health Management Technology, 4/09
As a new administration settles into the White House
armed with conviction, experience, and technological know-how,
theres an air of doing well and doing right. At the
forefront of priorities, along with the current economic
downturn at hand, is the need to streamline the health
care system and make quality, affordable health care a
reality. As part of President Obamas economic
stimulus package, hes pledged to have all medical
records electronic within five years. Thats not a
lot of time when you consider the fact that only 25 to 35
percent of the nations 5,000 hospitals use
computerized order entry and medical record systems.
GOP Puts Brakes on Sebelius Confirmation
Modern Healthcare, subscription needed 4/23/09
Republican lawmakers in the Senate have blocked a move to
confirm Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius as HHS secretary.
In a brief exchange on the Senate floor, Majority Leader
Harry Reid (D-Nev.) pushed for a vote on the
governors nomination today, but was rebuked by his
Republican counterpart Mitch McConnell (R-Ky.). McConnell
said that members of his party needed more time to
consider her nomination.
NCVHS to Hold Two-day Meeting on Meaningful
Use
Modern Healthcare, subscription needed 4/23/09
The National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics
will hold a hearing on meaningful use for
health care information technology next week. The April
28-29 executive subcommittee meeting to be held in
Washington will focus on use as it relates to the
capacity and functionality of electronic health records,
quality reporting, health information exchange, and
population/public health. Sessions also will discuss
meaningful use in health I.T. product certification, and
panelists will talk about ways to help vendors, providers
and other health care stakeholders reach health I.T.
goals by 2011.
Where, More or Less, is "The Frontier"?
HealthLeaders, 4/22/09
Health check on the farm. They are lands of great expanse,
of tumbleweed, grand canyons and parks, and yes, national
treasures. But for health program funding and definition
purposes, just what is a "Frontier"? How many
people must live there to qualify, or sustain a program
for funding, licensing, or support? Starting this Friday
in Albuquerque, federal officials are holding the first
of three meetings to help resolve these questions,
followed by meetings May 18 in Seattle and June 26 in
Omaha. The taskto better distinguish what is merely
"rural" from what is really "out there
yonder"is advocated in part by a patient, but
persistent nonprofit group, the National Center for
Frontier Communities.
Survey: Americans Want EHRs
Health Data Management, 4/22/09
Three out of four Americans think its important
that their health care provider use electronic health
records. But nearly 60% say they are not confident these
records, which can be shared on-line, will remain
confidential, a new national consumer survey shows. The
survey found that 67% of Americans think its likely
that electronic records would improve the overall quality
of U.S. medical care, and 62% say the automated records
would improve the quality of care their family receives.
Consumers Confused by EHR, PHR Differences
Modern Healthcare, subscription needed 4/22/09
The purpose of a personal health record is to help a
consumer or patient empower themselves by keeping track
of their own personal medical data for three main reasons:
to help reduce the number of deaths caused by medical
errors; to help a person in case of emergency and to help
that patient keep track of their medications and
insurance claims; and to attach X-rays, test results and
to carry emergency contact information for portability.
The purpose of an electronic health record is completely
different, and many patients believe that a PHR is an EHR.
AMA Plans One-stop Electronic Shopping for Docs
Kansas
City.com, 4/22/09
The American Medical Association is developing a Web-based
service offering doctors electronic prescribing, up-to-date
reference material and other resources. The idea is to
make it easier for physicians to adopt technology
President Obama is promoting for health care reform, to
streamline their workload, and improve patient care.
Health Nominee
Kathleen Sebelius Clears Hurdle
LA Times, 4/22/09
Kansas Gov. Kathleen Sebelius won the endorsement of a
divided Senate Finance Committee on Tuesday, probably
clearing the way for her confirmation as President Obama's
secretary of Health and Human Services. But eight of the
10 Republicans on the panel voted against her,
underscoring the increasingly partisan nature of the
emerging health care debate on Capitol Hill.
Senator Explains
His Vote Against Sebelius
Wall Street Journal, 4/21/09
Sen. Jon Kyl said he voted against Kansas Gov. Kathleen
Sebelius to be secretary of Health and Human Services
because of her support for research comparing the
effectiveness of different medical treatments for a
specific disease. "She left me with no assurance
that HHS, federal health care programs, or any new
entitysuch as the Federal Coordinating
Councilwill not use comparative effectiveness
research as a tool to deny care. And this should be a
matter of concern to all of us," the Arizona
Republican said in a statement.
Winners and Losers of HIT Stimulus Funds
HealthLeaders, 4/21/09
The federal government's $36 billion incentive package to
install electronic health records has created a lot of
excitement in the industry. It has also generated a call
to action. Health care CIOs and industry experts all seem
to agree that if providers want to collect the maximum
reimbursement available to them, they had better start (if
they haven't already) forming an I.T. strategy, choosing
vendors, and ensuring they have the I.T. expertise
required to meet the 2011 deadline. No one wants to leave
one penny of this money on the table.
Big Challenges Await Health-Records Transition
Wall Street Journal, 4/21/09
The physician in charge of the federal government's
massive push to move health care to electronic records
from paper files faces "huge challenges" as he
starts his new job in Washington this week. That phrase
comes from a paper David Blumenthal himself published
recently in the New England Journal of Medicine. He cited
low adoption rates, high costs, technical complexities,
and physician and patient concerns about privacy. Some
other experts have warned that systems that are poorly
designed or badly run can jeopardize patient safety. They
are calling for more regulation or stricter standards for
certification, arguing that the risks are heightened by
limited public oversight of the systems.
Partners' Glaser Joining ONC as Advisor
Health Data Management, 4/21/09
John Glaser, vice president and CIO at Partners
HealthCare System Inc. in Boston, soon will join the
office of the National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology in a temporary advisory role. Starting May 4,
Glaser says hell work four days a week for six
months advising the national coordinator within the U.S.
Department of Health and Human Services. Hell focus
on the issue of carrying out the health care information
technology provisions of the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act.
EHNAC Develops
Application Service Provider Accreditation Program for
EHRs
Healthcare IT News, 4/21/09
The Electronic Healthcare Network Accreditation
Commission, a non-profit standards development
organization and accrediting body, has developed a new
accreditation program for application service providers
for electronic health records. The Application Service
Provider Accreditation Program for Electronic Health
Records (ASPAP-EHR) evaluates companies providing ASP-format
EHRs against specific criteria covering privacy and
confidentiality, technical performance, business
processes, resources, and security.
Senators Ready
for Major Health Reform
Health Data Management, 4/20/09
U.S. Senators Edward Kennedy (D-Mass.) and Max Baucus (D-Mont.)
have announced their committees will move in a
coordinated manner in early June on major health care
reform legislation. Kennedy chairs the Health, Education,
Labor and Pensions Committee; Baucus chairs the Finance
Committee. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act
contained substantial funding and policy provisions to
promote health care information technology to support
comprehensive reform.
Blumenthal Starts as National Coordinator
Health Data Management, 4/20/09
David Blumenthal M.D., has begun serving as the National
Coordinator for Health Information Technology within the
U.S. Department of Health and Human Services. He succeeds
Robert Kolodner, M.D., who is returning to the Department
of Veterans Affairs. Blumenthal is a practicing physician.
He most recently served as director of the Institute for
Health Policy at Massachusetts General Hospital in Boston
and as a professor of medicine at Harvard Medical School.
He was a senior health policy advisor to President Obama
during the presidential campaign.
HHS Issues Guidance on Health I.T. Security
Healthcare IT News, 4/20/09
The Department of Health and Human Services has issued
guidance on how to comply with the security
specifications found in the economic recovery package.
The Health Information Technology for Economic and
Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, passed as part of American
Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA), requires
providers to use certain technologies and methodologies
to keep protected health information unusable, unreadable,
or indecipherable to unauthorized individuals. The
guidance was developed through a joint effort by the HHS
Office for Civil Rights, the Office of the National
Coordinator for Health Information Technology, and the
Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.

Vermont Ban on Marketing
Use of Rx Data Remains Intact
Modern Healthcare, subscription needed 4/27/09
A federal judge in Vermont rejected a challenge to a
state law that blocks the use of prescriber-identifiable
data for marketing. U.S. District Judge J. Garvan Murtha
wrote that the prescribing information represents
protected speech under the First Amendment but can be
appropriately limited to advance a substantial government
interest, granting deference to the Vermont
Legislatures conclusion that it has one.
GAO: States Worried about Tracking Funds
The Philadelphia Inquirer, 4/24/09
Despite President Obama's pledge that the $787 billion in
stimulus money will be subject to "unprecedented
accountability," many state officials worry that
they lack the resources to properly oversee how their
share of the money is being spent, Congress' watchdog
agency said in a report yesterday. With states slated to
receive about $49 billion in this budget yearmostly
for health, transportation and education
programsthe Government Accountability Office found
that the biggest concern was keeping track of the money.
Rural California RHIO Gets Tax Exempt Status
Health Data Management, 4/23/09
The Internal Revenue Service has approved federal tax
exemption status for the East Kern County Integrated
Technology Association, a Tehachapi, Calif.-based
regional health information organization. The IRS, after
years of inaction, recently started awarding tax-exempt
status to health information exchanges and regional
health information organizations.
Vermont Lawmaker: State Can Take Lead in Medical Cards
Boston Globe, 4/22/09
State lawmakers are hoping to have Vermont become the
nation's first state to employ medical card technology,
sort of a health care debit card. The proposal is part of
the Senate Appropriations Bill. Part of the proposal
establishes a task force of lawmakers, health care
providers, technology representatives, and licensed
health insurers. They would review the prospects of using
health information technology to revamp payment processes.
Whose eRecords Will They Will Be?
New Haven Independent, 4/21/09
Electronic medical records could potentially cut
Connecticuts health care costs, experts told a
state panel, but thorny ethical and technical questions
must first be addressed. Thats where you come in.
The Connecticut Health Policy Project, which is taking
the first steps toward establishing electronic medical
records here, wants consumers to pose as many queries as
possible, members of the organizations board of
directors told a group largely composed of state health
officials Monday.
Report Tracks State Health I.T. Efforts
Health Data Management, 4/21/09
The National Association of State Chief Information
Officers has published "Profiles of Progress 3:
State Health I.T. Initiatives." It is an updated
summary of where each state stands with government led or
designated efforts to implement health I.T. and
interoperable health information exchanges. The report,
which also covers the role, if any, that state CIOs play
in the efforts, was first published in November 2006. The
latest version chronicles the "expeditious growth
and adoption of health I.T. in just a few years as
government leaders increasingly tout this as a means to
improve patient care and reduce costs," according to
the Lexington, Ky.-based association.

More Prescribers Go
Electronic
Health Data Management, 4/22/09
Some 100,000 U.S. prescribers are now routing
prescriptions electronically over the Surescripts network,
up from just 19,000 two years ago and 74,000 at the end
of 2008, the company says. Of the clinicians using e-prescribing
in the first quarter of this year, 85% were physicians
and the remainder were nurse practitioners and physician
assistants, Surescripts says.
How Far Can Interactive Digital Medicine Go?
The Economist, 4/21/09
Let's explore the potential impact interactive digital
medicine that flows in multiple directionspeer-to-peer,
doc-to-patient, physician-to-physician, and on-line
groupscan have on the industry. For example, a Web
site called, "PatientsLikeMe," enables members
from around the world to share stories about their
ailments and treatment plans.
Hospitals Mine
Data to Identify Those Likely to Pay
Atlanta Journal-Constitution, 4/20/09
Services such as credit scoring help nonprofit hospitals
identify patients who qualify for charity or free care,
those eligible for discounts and those who should pay the
whole bill. "It's a sign of the times in health care,"
said Kevin Bloye, a Georgia Hospital Association vice
president. "Hospitals can use this as a tool to
determine who can pay and who can't." But the use of
credit scores in analyzing patients' finances has
triggered criticism for nonprofit hospitals. Many are
trying to tamp down a reputation as aggressive bill
collectors while their tax-exempt status gets heightened
scrutiny from lawmakers and regulators.
CMS Validation Surveys: On the Rise?
HealthLeaders, 4/20/09
Reports from the field indicate that validation surveys
by state surveyors on behalf of the CMS are happening
with greater frequency in 2009. Validation surveys are
unannounced surveys used to validate an organization's
accreditation process. These surveys are conducted on a
representative sample basis, or in response to
substantial allegations of noncompliance. Unlike in the
case of a for-cause survey, hospitals are selected at
random for validation surveys. It could be that CMS is
requesting more validation surveys to be ready to review
the Joint Commission's soon-to-be-submitted applications
for continued deeming authority.
NEHI Offers
Ideas on Comparative-Effectiveness
Modern Healthcare, subscription needed 4/20/09
The New England Healthcare Institute, a quality-research
and policy group based in Cambridge, Mass., has issued a
set of recommendations that it urges the Institute of
Medicine to include in its forthcoming guidance to
Congress on developing a national comparative-effectiveness
research program. The recommendations, included in the
white paper Balancing Act: Comparative
Effectiveness Research and Innovation in U.S. Health Care,
would help design a national comparative-effectiveness
program that identifies the best clinical interventions
while not discouraging innovation, said NEHI President
Wendy Everett.
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