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The International Meeting for Simulation in Healthcare
2015-01-10 - 2015-01-14    
All Day
Registration is Open! Please join us on January 10-14, 2015 for our fifteenth annual IMSH at the Ernest N. Morial Convention Center in New Orleans, Louisiana. Over [...]
Finding Time for HIPAA Amid Deafening Administrative Noise
2015-01-14    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
January 14, 2015, Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9am AKST | 8am HAST Main points covered: [...]
Meaningful Use  Attestation, Audits and Appeals - A Legal Perspective
2015-01-15    
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Join Jim Tate, HITECH Answers  and attorney Matt R. Fisher for our first webinar event in the New Year.   Target audience for this webinar: [...]
iHT2 Health IT Summit
2015-01-20 - 2015-01-21    
All Day
iHT2 [eye-h-tee-squared]: 1. an awe-inspiring summit featuring some of the world.s best and brightest. 2. great food for thought that will leave you begging for more. 3. [...]
Chronic Care Management: How to Get Paid
2015-01-22    
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Under a new chronic care management program authorized by CMS and taking effect in 2015, you can bill for care that you are probably already [...]
Proper Management of Medicare/Medicaid Overpayments to Limit Risk of False Claims
2015-01-28    
1:00 pm - 3:00 pm
January 28, 2015 Web Conference 12pm CST | 1pm EST | 11am MT | 10am PST | 9AM AKST | 8AM HAST Topics Covered: Identify [...]
Events on 2015-01-10
Events on 2015-01-20
iHT2 Health IT Summit
20 Jan 15
San Diego
Events on 2015-01-22
Latest News

28 companies, including tech firms, collaborate on EHR-fueled COVID-19 database

28 companies, including tech firms, collaborate on EHR-fueled COVID-19 database

An assortment of 28 U.S. firms have formed a cross-industry collaboration to attack COVID-19. These include well-known technology companies such as Change Healthcare, SAS, Helix, Veradigm and Boston Health Economics.

WHY IT MATTERS

Boston Health Economics, for example, is an independent analytics organization that aids providers in conducting research and helps analytic teams in generating evidence to improve medical decision-making.

An example of the type of assessments that healthcare providers can conduct with or without help from the group of vendors includes queries to the group’s COVID-19 Research Database.

Doctors and other stakeholders can use the database to evaluate drug effectiveness using de-identified electronic health record and claims data, identify demographic factors and pre-existing conditions that point toward the need for ventilator support, and assess the impact of quarantine measures.

Researchers hoping to use the COVID-19 Research Database can submit a proposal to the COVID Scientific Steering Committee, chaired by Dr. Mark Cullen, founding director at the Center for Population Health Science and a professor of medicine at Stanford University. Researchers whose submissions are accepted can access the COVID-19 Database at no charge. But with that access comes with a caveat from Cullen.

THE LARGER PICTURE

Other health IT vendors and provider organizations are working on COVID-19 solutions to help the healthcare industry.

For example, Cleveland Clinic and SAS have co-created a series of models to help hospitals anticipate enterprise resource planning needs during the COVID-19 pandemic and made them available via GitHub.

The predictive models can help health systems forecast patient volume, bed capacity, ventilator availability and more – helping them plan for more efficient and high-quality care delivery, while optimizing supply chain, staffing, operations and more.

Cleveland Clinic and SAS say the models were designed to show “worst-case, best-case and most-likely scenarios,” and can be tweaked in real time to factor in variables such as social distancing’s dampening effect.

ON THE RECORD

“The first challenge that many researchers have run into with this crisis is the difficulty of accessing high-quality health data that can be used to help solve pressing questions such as drug and non-drug treatment effects, factors that drive differential risk of catching the disease, and very different outcomes in those who do,” the Center for Population Health Science’s Cullen said. “As a massive public-private collaboration, the COVID-19 Research Database offers researchers and clinicians a solution and a chance to dramatically accelerate our understanding of this highly infectious virus.”

Source: https://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/28-companies-including-tech-firms-collaborate-ehr-fueled-covid-19-database