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Moving Forward the President s Vision of Interoperable EHRs Relevance to Public Health

The President's Overarching Goal is Far Reaching and Measurable. Nation-wide interoperable health information infrastructure and electronic health record (EHR) available for most Americans within ten years.. President George W. Bush, 2004. Outline. The call to actionThe complex nature of health inf

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Moving Forward the President s Vision of Interoperable EHRs Relevance to Public Health

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    1. Moving Forward the President’s Vision of Interoperable EHRs – Relevance to Public Health Helga E. Rippen, MD, PhD, MPH Senior Advisor, Health Informatics, Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation Department of Health and Human Services Digital Government May 16, 2005 Atlanta, Georgia

    2. The President’s Overarching Goal is Far Reaching and Measurable Nation-wide interoperable health information infrastructure and electronic health record (EHR) available for most Americans within ten years.

    3. Outline The call to action The complex nature of health information Highlights of Federal activities Summary

    4. Why Health IT? A Personal View Avoidance of medical errors Improve quality of care Accelerate bench to bedside Empower consumers Reduce costs   lAvoidance of medical errors –Up to 98000 avoidable annual deaths due to medical errors lImprovement of resource vectoring –Up to $300B spent annually on treatments with no health yield lAcceleration of knowledge diffusion –17 years for evidence to be integrated into practice lReduction of variability in healthcare delivery and access –Access to specialty care highly dependent on geography lEmpowerment of the consumer –Capitalize on growing consumer trend of active health management lStrengthening of data privacy and protection –HIPAA becomes reality lPromotion of public health and preparedness –Surveillance is fragmented, and importance to homeland security brings heightened awareness   lAvoidance of medical errors –Up to 98000 avoidable annual deaths due to medical errors lImprovement of resource vectoring –Up to $300B spent annually on treatments with no health yield lAcceleration of knowledge diffusion –17 years for evidence to be integrated into practice lReduction of variability in healthcare delivery and access –Access to specialty care highly dependent on geography lEmpowerment of the consumer –Capitalize on growing consumer trend of active health management lStrengthening of data privacy and protection –HIPAA becomes reality lPromotion of public health and preparedness –Surveillance is fragmented, and importance to homeland security brings heightened awareness

    5. Healthcare Delivery More Complex The population is aging. Prevalence of multiple chronic conditions is increasing. Older Americans with severe disabilities will more than double by 2050. Health care encounters and costs are correlated with presence of chronic conditions and disabilities.

    7. Health IT – Part of the Solution “By computerizing health records, we can avoid dangerous medical mistakes, reduce costs, and improve care.” --President George W. Bush, State of the Union Address, January 20, 2004 “All these problems – high costs, uncertain value, medical errors, variable quality, administrative inefficiencies, and poor coordination – are closely connected to our failure to use health information technology as an integral part of medical care.” --President George W. Bush, April 27, 2004 “And so the fundamental question is, how do we encourage information technology in a field like health care that will save lives, make patients more involved in decision-making, and save money for the American people.” --President George W. Bush, January 27, 2005

    8. “Information technology is a pivotal part of transforming our health care system. We are at a critical juncture. Working in close collaboration, the federal government and private sector can drive changes that will lead to fewer medical errors, lower costs, less hassle and better care.” -- Secretary Leavitt May 11, 2005 Health IT is Needed to Transform Our Health Care System

    9. The Leadership Panel Identified Three Key Imperatives for Health IT Widespread adoption of interoperable health IT should be a top priority for the U.S. health care system. The federal government should use its leverage as the nation’s largest health care payer and provider to drive adoption of health IT. Private sector purchasers and health care organizations can and should collaborate alongside the federal government to drive adoption of health IT.

    10. Outline The call to action The complex nature of health information Highlights of Federal activities Summary

    11. Health Information Intersects Many “Domains”

    12. Health Information is Complex and Crosscutting

    13. There are Many Potential Uses for Health Information

    14. One Concept of an EHR

    15. There are Many Sources of Health Information Healthcare provider office Pharmacists and PBMs Laboratories Government (local, state and federal) Insurers/Payers Employers Consumers Researchers etc…

    16. Benefits Are Most Significant for Interoperability

    17. There are Many Challenges to Interoperability Complexity of health information Some standards not implemented Many standards non-existent Paucity of data on economic benefit Wide variation in HIT products …

    18. Outline The call to action The complex nature of health information Highlights of Federal activities Summary

    19. Highlights Executive Order Secretary Leavitt’s 500 day plan ONCHIT’s Strategic Framework Standards and other activities

    20. Executive Order Articulates Vision, Goals and Position Vision of developing a nationwide interoperable infrastructure Incentives for the Use of Health Information Technology Establishing the Position of the National Health Information Technology Coordinator within the Department of Health and Human Services, Office of the Secretary Dr. Brailer named in May at the Secretary’s Health IT Summit the work of the National Coordinator shall be consistent with a vision of developing a nationwide interoperable health information technology infrastructure that: (a) Ensures that appropriate information to guide medical decisions is available at the time and place of care; (b) Improves health care quality, reduces medical errors, and advances the delivery of appropriate, evidence-based medical care; (c) Reduces health care costs resulting from inefficiency, medical errors, inappropriate care, and incomplete information; (d) Promotes a more effective marketplace, greater competition, and increased choice through the wider availability of accurate information on health care costs, quality, and outcomes; (e) Improves the coordination of care and information among hospitals, laboratories, physician offices, and other ambulatory care providers through an effective infrastructure for the secure and authorized exchange of health care information; and (f) Ensures that patients' individually identifiable health information is secure and protected. the work of the National Coordinator shall be consistent with a vision of developing a nationwide interoperable health information technology infrastructure that: (a) Ensures that appropriate information to guide medical decisions is available at the time and place of care; (b) Improves health care quality, reduces medical errors, and advances the delivery of appropriate, evidence-based medical care; (c) Reduces health care costs resulting from inefficiency, medical errors, inappropriate care, and incomplete information; (d) Promotes a more effective marketplace, greater competition, and increased choice through the wider availability of accurate information on health care costs, quality, and outcomes; (e) Improves the coordination of care and information among hospitals, laboratories, physician offices, and other ambulatory care providers through an effective infrastructure for the secure and authorized exchange of health care information; and (f) Ensures that patients' individually identifiable health information is secure and protected.

    21. Executive Guidance Support the delivery of healthcare Reduce costs and support effective markets Support coordination while ensuring protection of information the work of the National Coordinator shall be consistent with a vision of developing a nationwide interoperable health information technology infrastructure that: (a) Ensures that appropriate information to guide medical decisions is available at the time and place of care; (b) Improves health care quality, reduces medical errors, and advances the delivery of appropriate, evidence-based medical care; (c) Reduces health care costs resulting from inefficiency, medical errors, inappropriate care, and incomplete information; (d) Promotes a more effective marketplace, greater competition, and increased choice through the wider availability of accurate information on health care costs, quality, and outcomes; (e) Improves the coordination of care and information among hospitals, laboratories, physician offices, and other ambulatory care providers through an effective infrastructure for the secure and authorized exchange of health care information; and (f) Ensures that patients' individually identifiable health information is secure and protected. the work of the National Coordinator shall be consistent with a vision of developing a nationwide interoperable health information technology infrastructure that: (a) Ensures that appropriate information to guide medical decisions is available at the time and place of care; (b) Improves health care quality, reduces medical errors, and advances the delivery of appropriate, evidence-based medical care; (c) Reduces health care costs resulting from inefficiency, medical errors, inappropriate care, and incomplete information; (d) Promotes a more effective marketplace, greater competition, and increased choice through the wider availability of accurate information on health care costs, quality, and outcomes; (e) Improves the coordination of care and information among hospitals, laboratories, physician offices, and other ambulatory care providers through an effective infrastructure for the secure and authorized exchange of health care information; and (f) Ensures that patients' individually identifiable health information is secure and protected.

    22. Secretary Leavitt’s 500 Day Plan are Setting the Course for the Future Transform Health Care System * Modernize Medicare and Medicaid * Advance Medical Research* Secure the Homeland* Protect Life, Family and Human Dignity Improve the Human Condition Around the World

    23. 500 Day Plan to Transform the Health Care System Expressing a clear vision of health information technology that conveys the benefits to patients, providers and payers. Convening a national collaboration to further develop, set and certify health information technology standards and outcomes for interoperability, privacy and data exchange. Realizing the near-term benefits of health information technology in the focused areas of adverse drug-incident reporting, e-prescribing, lab and claims-sharing data, clinic registrations and insurance forms.

    24. 500 Day Plan to Modernize Medicare and Medicaid Creating workable methods of rewarding health providers for positive outcomes. Positioning HHS at the forefront of the health information technology interoperability movement.

    25. 500 Day Plan to Advance Medical Research Creating an integrated electronic network of privacy-protected population data, genetic information and medical records to accelerate discoveries that will define an individual’s risk of disease, response to treatment and likelihood of a side effect. Improving the clinical research network to advance better prevention, early diagnosis and treatment of disease.

    26. 500 Day Plan to Secure the Homeland Providing early warnings of naturally occurring and manmade threats through improved domestic and international surveillance. (5000 day vision – Surveillance of data in electronic health records provide early warnings of dangerous viruses or bio-terrorism activities)

    27. ONCHIT’s Framework for Strategic Action Focuses on Four Goals Inform clinical practice Interconnect clinicians Personalize care Improve population health

    28. Strategies to Inform Clinical Practice Incentivize EHR adoption Reduce risk of EHR investment Promote EHR diffusion in rural and underserved areas

    29. Strategies to Interconnect Clinicians Foster regional collaborations Develop a national health information network Coordinate federal health information systems

    30. Strategies to Personalize Care Encourage use of personal health records Enhance informed consumer choice Promote use of telehealth systems

    31. Strategies to Improve Population Health Unify public health surveillance architectures Streamline quality and health status monitoring Accelerate research and dissemination of evidence

    32. Specific Activities Exploration Health IT standards Reducing barriers Regulation

    33. Outline The call to action The complex nature of health information Highlights of Federal activities Summary

    34. Summary The Federal Government is committed to moving forward HIT Active collaboration between private and public sectors is critical. Communities are actively organizing and moving forward Public health is a critical component

    35. Questions? Helga Rippen, MD, PhD, MPH Senior Advisory, Health Informatics Office of the Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation Department of Health and Human Services 202 205 8678 Helga.Rippen@hhs.gov

    36. References Executive Order: http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2003/01/20030124.html ONCHIT web site http://www.hhs.gov/healthit/ HL7 EHR Functional Model and Standards http://www.hl7.org/ehr/downloads/index.asp

    38. Request for Information to Explore Approaches for NHIN Request for Information (RFI) solicited comments on the components of the National Health Information Network (NHIN) and how to achieve widespread interoperability of HIT and information exchange. (11/15/04) Explores the role of the federal government in a NHIN, how it could be coordinated with the Federal Health Architecture (FHA), and how it could be supported and coordinated by Regional Health Information Organizations (RHIOs).

    39. Project Activities to Explore Approaches for Moving Forward AHRQ $139 million in grants and contracts to promote the use of HIT, 100 grants awarded in 38 States CDC – PHIN NIH – Nectar and CaBIG CMS – DoQ-IT AHRQ received over 1,000 letters of intent, resulting in some 600 applications. From this, AHRQ awarded over 100 grants totaling $96 million in 38 States to help communities, hospitals, providers, and health care systems plan, implement and demonstrate the value of health IT. A consortium led by the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago has been awarded a multi-million dollar, multi-year contract to establish and operate the National Health Information Technology Resource Center (National HITRC). AHRQ received over 1,000 letters of intent, resulting in some 600 applications. From this, AHRQ awarded over 100 grants totaling $96 million in 38 States to help communities, hospitals, providers, and health care systems plan, implement and demonstrate the value of health IT. A consortium led by the National Opinion Research Center (NORC) at the University of Chicago has been awarded a multi-million dollar, multi-year contract to establish and operate the National Health Information Technology Resource Center (National HITRC).

    40. Leading by Example – Adoption of CHI Standards CHI Initiative adopted standards across 20 clinical domains including: Demographics (HL7®) Medications (Federal Drug Terminologies, FDA Standards, RxNorm, VA’s NDF-RT) Immunizations (HL7®) Anatomy (SNOMED CT® and NCI Thesaurus) Nursing (SNOMED CT®) Lab Result Contents (SNOMED CT®) Diagnosis/Problem Lists Clinical Encounters (HL7®) (SNOMED CT®) Units (HL7®)

    41. CHI adopted standards (cont’d) Messaging standards scheduling, medical record/image management, patient administration, observation reporting, financial management, patient care (HL7®) Retail pharmacy transactions (NCPDP SCRIPT®) Connectivity (IEEE™ 1073) Image Information to Workstations (DICOM®)

    42. Supporting the Development of Standards HL7 EHR Functional Model and Standards DSTU is divided into three sections: - Direct Care - Supportive - Information Infrastructure The EHR Model and Standards specify 125 functions that may be present in an EHR. HL7 balloted, as an informative document (i.e., not a standard), Minimum Function Sets (MFS) for certain care settings (e.g., ambulatory care, LTC, etc.)

    43. Supporting the Availability of Health IT Standards Federal Government entered into a license with the College of American Pathologists (CAP) to make SNOMED-CT freely available to U.S. health care entities

    44. Addressing Barriers Through Stark Phase II Stark Phase II (IFR 3/26/04) included an exception for the provision of IT items or services by a designated health services entity to a physician used as part of a community-wide health information system.

    45. Mandated Regulation of E-Rx NPRM Proposed E-Rx standards include: Standards to support messaging between prescribers, dispensers, and Part D sponsors. Standards support the exchange of information for all prescribing transactions (except the prescription fill Status notification transaction) including prescription requests and responses related to: new, refills, change, and cancellation prescription request and response transactions.

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