1 / 19

The VA and VistA: A Role Model for Radical Improvement of Health Systems Everywhere

The VA and VistA: A Role Model for Radical Improvement of Health Systems Everywhere. Phillip Longman Senior Research Fellow New America Foundation Senior Fellow Washington Monthly Longman@newamerica.net. Tom Cruise’s depiction of life in a Bronx VA Hospital, 1989

jubal
Download Presentation

The VA and VistA: A Role Model for Radical Improvement of Health Systems Everywhere

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. The VA and VistA: A Role Model for Radical Improvement of Health Systems Everywhere • Phillip Longman • Senior Research Fellow • New America Foundation • Senior Fellow • Washington Monthly • Longman@newamerica.net

  2. Tom Cruise’s depiction of life in a Bronx VA Hospital, 1989 Sample dialogue: This place is a f***ing slum!

  3. “ . . . Overall, VHA patients receive better care than patients in other settings” Articles About VA’s Quality Revolution

  4. Elements of VA Quality Revolution • Fully integrated, patient-centered, evidence-based care. • Focus on wellness, prevention, and effective disease management. • Low rates of medical error. • Realized economies of scale (drugs, medical supplies and devices) • Low cost per patient. • High rates of patient of satisfaction.

  5. The History of the Hard Hats • Deviant • Secretive • Insubordinate • Persecuted • Persevering • Triumphant • Unsung

  6. “There is no reason for any person to have a computer in their home” ~Ken Olson, President, Digital Equipment Corporation, at the Convention of the World Future Society, 1977.

  7. Wally Fort

  8. George Timson - 1980

  9. Got MUMPS? • MUMPS (Massachusetts General Hospital Utility Multi-Programming System), or alternatively M, is a programming language created in the late 1960s, originally for use in the healthcare industry. • It was designed for the production of multi-user database-driven applications. It predates C and most other popular languages in current usage, and has very different syntax and terminology. • Appeared in 1966 • Designed by Neil Pappalardo

  10. “Hard Hat” Greg Kreis

  11. Open Source before Open Source

  12. VistA today

  13. The Proprietary Threat Code Red: How software companies could screw up Obama’s health care reform. Washington Monthly July/August 2009

  14. VistA 2.0? • “VistA is not a program; it’s a process” • Rick Marshall • Executive Director • VistaExpertise Network

  15. VistA 2.0? • Question: Should VistA be established as a national • standard? What are the implications of this action? • Answer: Given the resources that VA has expended to • date and can bring to bear in the future, VistA 2.0 could • become the international standard for medical center • information systems. This could result in huge financial • savings in the healthcare community, but VistA 2.0 could • result in huge advances in evidence based medicine, • medical research and data standardization and • portability. • American Council on Technology, VistA Modernization, “Legacy to Leadership” Report, May 2010

  16. Phillip Longman Senior Research Fellow New America Foundation Senior Fellow Washington Monthly Longman@newamerica.net

More Related