Showing posts with label EHR. Show all posts
Showing posts with label EHR. Show all posts

Monday, March 1, 2010

HIMSS 2010 – Monday

We may be in the middle of a major recession, but they forgot to tell the organizers and attendees of the 2010 HIMSS Conference in Atlanta. The Georgia World Conference Center is bursting at the seams, and teeming with activity. If you didn’t know any better, you’d think the government was about to pump a few billion dollars into the healthcare industry.

So far, most of the energy seems to be around Meaningful Use (and, by extension, EHRs and interoperability in general), ICD-10, and 5010, in that order.

Meaningful Use is, of course, a very broad topic, since it covers requirements ranging from clinician workflow to interoperability to patient communication, and beyond.

Patient Portals

I attended a very interesting presentation by Dr. Eric Liederman and Jan Oldenburg of Kaiser Permanente this morning, explaining why and how they built a “transactional patient portal” and deployed it to all of their members (the last hospital to implement the system will go live this week).

Kaiser Permanente has the largest civilian EHR deployment in the world.

Some no-brainer points of interest:

  • According to a 2009 Deloitte survey of healthcare consumers, 57% of patients want a secure website to “access their medical records, schedule office visits, refill prescriptions and pay medical bills.”
  • Among Kaiser Permanente members, the retention rate is 2.6-4.6 percentage points higher among patient portal users than the rest of the population.

Some surprises (at least to me):

  • The most popular feature on KP’s patient portal is lab results.
  • Initially, only “normal” results were available to patients via the portal. Eventually, though, most KP regions started posting all results (that can be provided legally) on the portal, because they got more from people wondering why some of their results were missing than they would from people worried about abnormal results.

Patient portals (or something very close) will be required in 2013, so it’s inevitable that most doctors will need to find and implement a solution pretty soon.

5010/ICD-10

I also attended a great round table session on 5010 and ICD-10 migration. As we’ve known for a while, there is a lot of anxiety out there around these requirements and—surprise!—healthcare providers expect software and clearinghouse vendors to solve their problems for them.

In fact, there is a lot that technology can do (and providers will absolutely have to leverage technology to address the issues), but clinicians, coders, billers, office managers, front desk staff, etc., will all be heavily impacted by 5010 and ICD-10, regardless of what their software and clearinghouses do for them.

Much of the angst right now is centered around providing training and education to staff. Providers are looking to HIMSS, AHIMA, WEDI, and CMS for guidance.

Incidentally, a Product Manager from RealMed was sitting at my table and said that around 40% of their customers are still sending claims as print image files (PIFs) of HCFA 1500 forms and NSF files, and RealMed is translating them to 4010s. He anticipates that he’ll have to continue to convert those archaic file formats to 5010. Yikes!

Monday, September 8, 2008

"Free" PMS and EMR software

Every few months, I get an e-mail or see a blog post about a new Open Source, "free" EMR or PMS. Usually, the e-mail is entitled something like, "We'd better keep our eyes on this..."

(By the way, I intentionally capitalize Open Source, because, as far as I'm concerned, it's a brand name. Or, if it's not a brand name, it's a movement. Or a religion. Or a political party. Whatever it is, it's a proper noun, and consequently requires capitalization.

For evidence of this, look at the Wikipedia entry for Open Source. As of this writing, it has the disclaimer, "The neutrality of this article is disputed" at the top. Of course it is! It's difficult to write about your religion and stay neutral.)

But I digress. I don't want to rehash the worn-out debate between Open Source and commercial software. That's about as interesting as Microsoft vs. Apple, Microsoft vs. Oracle, and Microsoft vs. Mozilla. The fact is, if Open Source works for your project, then you should use Open Source. If a commercial package meets your needs, use it.

Having spent most of the past 15 years of my career in the medical practice management software arena, I believe there are two broad categories of medical practices:

Open SourceCommercial Software
Sophisticated internal IT staffEveryone else
Doctors = Technologists
High threshold of pain
Interest in or need for heavy customization
Equal/greater interest in tech innovation vs. treating patients

I honestly can't see where Open Source projects compete with commercial software like AdvancedMD. First of all, AdvancedMD and other SaaS-based software (is there any other kind?) are essentially free. The only up-front cost is for training and implementation. With commercial software, those services are available directly from the vendor, or from their authorized VAR. With Open Source, you'll have to find someone to provide those services, or you're working with a consultant. Either way, they're not free.

The real cost of software comes in the ongoing maintenance and support. With AdvancedMD, you pay a reasonable, fixed monthly cost. The software is maintained by the same team of IT professionals that maintain our other 3,000 customers. Help Desk support is provided by the same team of Support professionals that serve those same 3,000 customers.

If you choose Open Source, someone has to install and maintain the software, and provide end-user support. The software was free...these services are decidedly not.

That's not to say that there is no place for Open Source. There certainly is, and I'm certain that there are dozens if not hundreds of success stories.

The point is that it is very, very easy to determine whether you are a candidate for Open Source PMS and EMR software or not: If you fall in the left side of the above table, you should consider it. If you're one of "everyone else", well, welcome to AdvancedMD. (Sorry, that really was a shameless plug.)

Monday, June 30, 2008

NAHIT "Defining Key Health Information Technology Terms"

NAHIT recently released a document called (get this):

The National Alliance for Health Information Technology Report to the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology on Defining Key Health Information Technology Terms

Basically, it has some interesting definitions for some common healthcare terminology. The location of the original document (along with the rest of the NAHIT site) appears to be down at the moment, but John Mertz at NeoTools has conveniently listed the terms for us, so I'll repeat them here:
  • Electronic Medical Record: An electronic record of health-related information on an individual that can be created, gathered, managed, and consulted by authorized clinicians and staff within one healthcare organization.
  • Electronic Health Record: An electronic record of health-related information on an individual that conforms to nationally recognized standards and that can be created, managed, and consulted by authorized clinicians and staff across more than one healthcare organization.
  • Personal Health Record: An electronic record of health-related information on an individual that conforms to nationally recognized interoperability standards and that can be drawn from multiple sources while being managed, shared, and controlled by the individual.
  • Health Information Exchange: The electronic movement of health-related information among organizations according to nationally recognized standards.
  • Health Information Organization: An organization that oversees and governs the exchange of health-related information among organizations according to nationally recognized standards.
  • Regional Health Information Organization: A health information organization that brings together health care stakeholders within a defined geographic area and governs health information exchange among them for the purpose of improving health and care in that community.
I don't know whether there is industry-wide agreement on these definitions, but they're an interesting start for the uninitiated.