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Edition Sixty-Eight (5/2/11)


Rule Sets Value-Based
Purchasing
Health Data
Management,
4/29/11
The CMS issued a final rule to establish the Hospital
Value-Based Purchasing program, which ties acute care
Medicare payments to quality of care beginning in fiscal
year 2013. CMS estimates $850 million in Medicare
payments to hospitals during FY 2013 to be based on
meeting a set of quality measures. The size of the value-based
payments fund increase over time as Medicare shifts from
payment-based on the quantity of services provided to
performance-based payments.
HRSA Announces $12 Million Rural Health I.T. Grant
Program
Modern Healthcare, subscription required, 4/28/11
The Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA)
unveiled details of a $12 million grant program designed
to assist rural health care providers qualify for
incentive payments under ARRA. HRSA will distribute up to
40 grants through the Rural Health Information Technology
Network Program to rural providers who work in formal
networks, alliances, coalitions, or partnerships to help
them achieve Meaningful Use.
Meaningful Use: 'Bridge to Main Event'
Health Data Management, 4/28/11
The
Meaningful Use
EHR adoption incentive program is merely the beginning
phase of a long-term shift in how health care is
reimbursed. That was the message delivered by Todd Park,
the chief technology officer at HHS, who addressed a
gathering of community health leaders. "Meaningful
Use is a bridge to the main eventhealth reform,"
he said.
CORE Seeks Broader Representation
Health Data Management, 4/27/11
The Council for Affordable Quality Healthcare has formed
a committee to develop recommendations on expanding
stakeholder governance of its Committee on Operating
Rules for Information Exchange (CAQH). CAQH is an
alliance of health plans and trade associations. Its CORE
seeks to standardize rules for administrative and
financial transactions under HIPAA. The federal health
reform law mandates the use of such operating rules
between 2013 and 2016.
With a Little Cash, Health I.T. on the Way
Nextgov, 4/26/11
The new federal center set up to launch U.S. health care
into the digital age has already certified more than 600
new HIT products and is ready to start helping providers
set these systems up. Farzad Mostashari, just two weeks
into his new job as national coordinator for HIT, said
his office has opened 62 regional extension centers,
which aim to help providers understand and set up health
I.T. programs.
Health Care Groups Release e-Prescribing Guide
Modern Physician, subscription required, 4/26/11
Six health care organizations have teamed up to develop a
how-to guide on e-prescribing. The guide includes
information on meeting the federal criteria for
Meaningful Use, as well as details on new Medicare e-prescribing
requirements and frequently asked questions about
adopting HIT.
ATA Urges Removal of 'Outdated' Restrictions on
Telemedicine
Healthcare IT News, 4/26/11
The American Telemedicine Association (ATA) called on the
CMS to use its authority to waive what the ATA calls the
restriction-riddled Medicare telemedicine
statute for the new ACOs. Removing the restrictions is
key to the success of ACOs, the ATA contends.
NIST, ONC Plan Measures, Testing to Improve Health I.T.
Usability
Government Health IT, 4/25/11
Health care providers may soon have guides which describe
the usability of EHRsdesigned to make the steps to
adopt and use health I.T. clear and transparent and in
the process, improve patient safety. Among the efforts,
the National Institute for Standards and Technology (NIST)
is developing a set of procedures which are objective and
repeatable for evaluating, testing, and validating the
usability of EHRs and other health I.T. systems.
Meaningful User: Attestation Easy, Registration Not
Health Data Management, 4/25/11
Successfully attesting to Meaningful Use of EHRs when
attestation opened on April 18 was easy for some
hospitals, the difficult part was getting registered for
the Meaningful Use program in early Januarya
process which because of Medicare bureaucracy didn't
actually finish until mid-March.
Health I.T. Chief Mostashari Details What's Next for ONC
iHealthBeat, 4/25/11
In an interview with iHealthBeat, Farzad
Mostasharithe country's new national coordinator
for health I.T.discussed his top priorities, why
some health care organizations might delay attestation of
Meaningful Use, the importance of engaging patients in
health I.T. efforts, and the balancing act required to
ensure Stage 2 of the Meaningful Use program is ambitious
yet achievable.
CMS Quality Reporting System Improve Outcomes, Quality of
Care
Cardiovascular Business, 4/25/11
A report issued by the CMS shows quality reporting
systems and e-prescribing incentives have improved
outcomes and the quality of care delivered to Medicare
beneficiaries. Two pay-for-performance initiatives, the
2009 Physician Quality Reporting System and e-prescribing
Experience Report found 119,804 physicians and
professionals in 12,647 practices who reported quality
measures to Medicare received incentive payments under
the Physician Quality Reporting System which totaled to
more than $234 million. In 2007, the first year of the
program, the incentives paid equated to $36 million.
ONC Plans Efforts to Develop Patient Consent for Exchange
Government Health IT, 4/22/11
ONC intends to conduct a consumer electronic consent
pilot as part of advancing HIE. The ability for patients
to decide whether they should provide electronic consent
in situations which would trigger it is a step which can
build trust in sharing their health data and accelerate
exchange. ONC is gauging vendor interest and experience
in managing such a pilot.
Health I.T. Work Group Considers EHR Usability Testing
Modern Healthcare, subscription required, 4/22/11
A work group of the federally chartered HIT Policy
Committee tackled the question of whether and how it's
possible to test the usability of EHR systems and
opinions on the viability of such testing ranged from
outright skepticism to absolute confidence. The committee's
adoption and certification work group heard testimony
from an array of EHR experts, including providers,
developers, testers, and market watchers.
CMS Says More Docs Opting for Evidence of Effectiveness
in Treatments
Government
Health IT,
4/21/11
More physicians are participating in pay for
reporting programs which focus on using quality
measures and e-prescribing, according to the CMS. Its
data also shows physicians are increasingly turning to
treatments which offer the best evidence of effectiveness.
Obama Touts Health I.T. During Town Hall Meeting at
Facebook
Washington
Post, 4/21/11
During a town hall meeting at Facebook headquarters,
President Obama discussed the benefits of health I.T. and
adoption incentives. Obama made the stop at Facebook as
part of a three-day, three-state tour to drum up support
for his plan to reduce the federal deficit.
Tiger Team Asks Public for Feedback on Exchange Trust
Issues
Government
Health IT,
4/21/11
An advisory panel has asked for public feedback on issues
it should take up next, as it continues to flesh out a
comprehensive privacy and security policy framework for
electronic HIE. The framework builds on current law,
specifically HIPAA, and is based on fair information
practice principles, according to Deven McGraw, chair of
the Privacy and Security Tiger Team, a work group of the
advisory Health I.T. Policy Committee. McGraw is also
director of the health privacy project at the Center for
Democracy and Technology.
EMRs Speed Genetic Health Studies
Healthcare IT
News, 4/21/11
Recruiting thousands of patients to collect health data
for genetic clues to disease is expensive and time
consuming. But the arduous process of collecting data for
genetic studies could be faster and cheaper by instead
mining patient data which already exists in electronic
medical records, according to new Northwestern Medicine
research.
ONC to Fine Tune Technical Guides for Standards in Stage
2
Government Health IT, 4/20/11
ONC intends to fine tune standards involved in realizing
Stage 2 Meaningful Use recommendations and fill in where
missing details exist during the next four months. ONC
plans to refresh and reload adopted
certification criteria and new or updated technical
descriptions to guide vendors to establish standards,
said Dr. Doug Fridsma, ONC director of standards and
interoperability. He described it as ONCs health I.T.
summer camp.
Policies on Digital Certificates Urged
Modern Healthcare, subscription required, 4/20/11
A federal standards work group on privacy and security of
health information is recommending the government develop
a set of policies on how to certify organizations which
issues digital certificates to identify users
of the federally developed Direct Project exchange
profile.
CHIME Weighs In on ONC Federal HIT Strategic Plan
HealthLeaders, 4/19/11
CHIME submitted comments to ONC on the proposed federal
HIT strategic plan, supporting the plan's goals but
wanting to see refinements which increases the likelihood
for effective and widespread adoption of I.T. CHIME asked
ONC to provide standardized approaches and to allow
sufficient time to encourage the adoption of EHR systems
and supporting technologies by providers.
Meaningful Use Attestation Starts
Health Data Management, 4/18/11
On April 18, the CMS began the attestation process for
demonstrating Meaningful Use of EHRs to qualify for
Medicare incentive payments. The EHR Incentive Programs
website now has a new attestation page for information on
the process and to actually attest to compliance with
Meaningful Use criteria. The website includes a
Meaningful Use attestation calculator, enabling providers
to confirm they meet criteria before attesting to it and
print a summary. Eligible professional and hospital user
guides on the site walk providers through the attestation
system prior to attesting.
EHR Reminders Can Help Docs Avoid Unnecessary Treatments
Modern Healthcare, subscription required, 4/18/11
Electronic clinical decision support reminders can
successfully steer physicians away from ordering
unnecessary treatments, according to results of a new
study published in the journal Pediatrics.
Researchers determined the reminders prevented 460
unnecessary procedures, for a total cost savings of $165,000
over one year.
Move Gradually on PCAST Report Recommendations: ONC
Work Group
Modern Healthcare, subscription required, 4/18/11
A work group of the federally chartered HIT Policy
Committee concluded in a presentation delivered to ONC
that it was feasible to move in the direction pointed to
by a White House technology advisory council, but ONC
should proceed by making incremental changes from its
present technological course. In December, the President's
Council of Advisors on Science and Technology issued a
report which called on ONC to use its leverage to create
and adopt a universal exchange language and use so-called
meta-data tagging to facilitate records search and
retrieval. The tags also could host privacy and security
constraints which would follow the data from user to user.

Mississippi HIE Gets
Federal Approval
Health Data Management, 4/26/11
ONC approved the strategic and operational plan for
Mississippi's HIE. The HIE is a statewide expansion of
the Mississippi Coastal Health Information Exchange, a
proof-of-concept pilot program established after
Hurricane Katrina to provide a medical information system
across six hard-hit counties.
States Eye Savings in
Using Medicaid Funds for Telehealth Services
The Courier-Journal, 4/24/11
More states are seeking federal approval to use Medicaid
funds for telehealth services as they work to address
persistent budget deficits and a growing shortage of in-home
care providers. Indiana already provides Medicaid
reimbursements for telehealth. Meanwhile, Kentucky's
Cabinet for Health and Family Services recently asked for
federal permission to use Medicaid funds for such
services.
Maine Civil Liberties Union, State Senator Seek HIE Opt-in
Law
Healthcare IT News, 4/18/11
In an effort to maximize people's control over how their
health information is disseminated, the Maine Civil
Liberties Union, alongside privacy advocates and care
providers, gathered to call on the state legislature to
pass a medical patient privacy and consent bill. The bill,
An Act to Ensure Patient Privacy and Control with
Regard to Health Information Exchanges," is
sponsored by State Senator Roger Katz.

The Rise of Social
Media & Participatory Medicine
iHealthBeat, 4/28/11
The growing use of social media and participatory
medicine is allowing patients to take greater control of
their own health care. Social media enhances the search
for health information, while on-line communities empower
patients and providers to interact at new levels.
Whats Your ACO
Gripe?
H&HN, 4/25/11
In the month since the proposed rule for Medicare's ACO
program has gone public, and with a little more than
eight months remaining until the program starts in
earnest in 2012, concerns from observers and interested
parties have unsurprisingly piled up, a natural response
to a major initiative hailed by its supporters as one of
the keys to reducing long-term health care costs at the
same time it improves overall health care outcomes.
Green I.T. a Growing
Opportunity for Vendors
Healthcare IT
News, 4/21/11
Green I.T. initiatives take on added importance in the
next few years as more organizations commit financial
resources and develop comprehensive strategies, according
to a study. Among organizational priorities, green I.T.
initiatives tend to rank around the middle, but the study
suggests the trend line is headed upward. In 2009 only
nine percent of firms rated green I.T. as an upper half
organizational priority.
For Doctors, Social Media a Tricky Case
Boston Globe, 4/20/11
An incident in which a Rhode Island physician was
disciplined for discussing a patient on Facebook
highlights growing concern about physicians' use of
social media. The physician was fired from Westerly
Hospital in Rhode Island last year after posting
information about a trauma patient.
CD Import for ED Transfers Could Cut CT Imaging by 484,000
Exams
CMIO, 4/18/11
Brigham and Womens Hospital cut subsequent
diagnostic imaging by 17 percent and subsequent CT
imaging by 16 percent after implementing CD import to
PACS among ED transfer patients, according to a study.
The authors characterized the CD import system as a
partial success and noted the need for more reliable,
health I.T. based image transfer mechanisms.
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