Events Calendar

Mon
Tue
Wed
Thu
Fri
Sat
Sun
M
T
W
T
F
S
S
2
3
5
6
7
8
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
24
25
26
27
28
30
1
2
3
4
5
The 10th Annual Traumatic Brain Injury Conference
2020-06-01 - 2020-06-02    
All Day
Arrowhead Publishers is pleased to announce its 10th Annual Traumatic Brain Injury Conference will be coming back to Washington, DC on June 1-2, 2020. This conference brings [...]
5th World Congress On Public Health, Epidemiology & Nutrition
2020-06-01 - 2020-06-02    
All Day
We invite all the participants across the world to attend the “5th World Congress on Public Health, Epidemiology & Nutrition” during June 01-02, 2020; Sydney, [...]
Global Conference On Clinical Anesthesiology And Surgery
2020-06-04 - 2020-06-05    
All Day
Miami is an International city at Florida's southeastern tip. Its Cuban influence is reflected in the cafes and cigar shops that line Calle Ocho in [...]
5th International Conferences On Clinical And Counseling Psychology
2020-06-09 - 2020-06-10    
All Day
Conferenceseries LLC Ltd and its subsidiaries including iMedPub Ltd and Conference Series Organise 3000+ Conferences across USA, Europe & Asia with support from 1000 more scientific societies and Publishes 700+ Open [...]
50th International Conference On Nursing And Healthcare
2020-06-10 - 2020-06-11    
All Day
Conference short name: Nursing Conferences 2020 Full name : 50th International conference on Nursing and Healthcare Date : June 10-11, 2020 Place : Frankfurt, Germany [...]
Connected Claims USA Virtual
The insurance industry is built to help people when they are in need, and only the claims organization makes that possible. Now, the world faces [...]
Federles Master Tutorial On Abdominal Imaging
2020-06-29 - 2020-07-01    
All Day
The course is designed to provide the tools for participants to enhance abdominal imaging interpretation skills utilizing the latest imaging technologies. Time: 1:00 pm - [...]
IASTEM - 864th International Conference On Medical, Biological And Pharmaceutical Sciences ICMBPS
2020-07-01 - 2020-07-02    
All Day
IASTEM - 864th International Conference on Medical, Biological and Pharmaceutical Sciences ICMBPS will be held on 3rd - 4th July, 2020 at Hamburg, Germany . [...]
International Conference On Medical & Health Science
2020-07-02 - 2020-07-03    
All Day
ICMHS is being organized by Researchfora. The aim of the conference is to provide the platform for Students, Doctors, Researchers and Academicians to share the [...]
Mental Health, Addiction, And Legal Aspects Of End-Of-Life Care CME Cruise
2020-07-03 - 2020-07-10    
All Day
Mental Health, Addiction Medicine, and Legal Aspects of End-of-Life Care CME Cruise Conference. 7-Night Cruise to Alaska from Seattle, Washington on Celebrity Cruises Celebrity Solstice. [...]
ISER- 843rd International Conference On Science, Health And Medicine ICSHM
2020-07-03 - 2020-07-04    
All Day
ISER- 843rd International Conference on Science, Health and Medicine (ICSHM) is a prestigious event organized with a motivation to provide an excellent international platform for the academicians, [...]
04 Jul
2020-07-04    
12:00 am
ICRAMMHS is to bring together innovative academics and industrial experts in the field of Medical, Medicine and Health Sciences to a common forum. All the [...]
Events on 2020-06-04
Events on 2020-06-10
Events on 2020-06-23
Connected Claims USA Virtual
23 Jun 20
London
Events on 2020-06-29
Events on 2020-07-02
Latest News

An interoperability update: Do we need more carrots and sticks?

Earlier this year, the ONC released the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA), which responds to a mandate included in 2016’s 21st Century Cures Act and lays out principles, terms and conditions on which to base an interoperability framework that healthcare organizations can embrace.

“This means patients who have received care from multiple doctors and hospitals should have their medical history electronically accessible on demand by any other treating provider in a network that signed the Common Agreement,” said National Coordinator for Health IT Donald Rucker in a recent blog post.

To achieve that goal, TEFCA is divided into parts A, the principles, and B, the terms and conditions, which is also where the rubber meets the road for many who live in the healthcare IT world.

“Part A good, Part B not so much,” John Halamka, MD, CIO of Beth Israel Deaconess Hospital in Boston, said in recent comments.

The departure between A and B, per Halamka and others, is that TEFCA has the temerity to spell out both the how (A) and the what (B). Describing the what as “old, very cumbersome standards,’ Massachusetts E-Health Collaborative CEO Micky Tripathi said, “Developers won’t touch those things with a 10-foot pole.”

I have no quarrel with Halamka and Tripathi on their evaluation of standards, but ONC and Congress are right to feel that this whole healthcare IT ubiquity thing is taking too long.

Sure, the proposal and the responses illustrate well that the ongoing project to make healthcare IT systems communicate is long and arduous. But the real issue is that it’s also fraught with complexity, as Tripathi points out, and that insufficient incentives, misplaced priorities and narrow perspectives leave some tasks without any identifiable advocate.

The short list of remaining interoperability obstacles is significant.

Incomplete EHR Adoption: For starters, while incentives to adopt electronic health records have worked well, they’ve really only been applied to hospitals and clinics. Left out of the deal were skilled nursing facilities, behavioral health facilities, long-term and post-acute facilities and other providers. It will be difficult to have comprehensive records to share if only certain segments of the overall healthcare complex have the necessary tools.

Uneven Network Availability: To this point, rural hospitals and clinics, ironically the most essential of all facilities, have fared the worst in adopting EHRs. Funds are in short supply and trained personnel are often scarce outside urban areas, so it doesn’t help that internet service providers have often not built secure, reliable networks in these areas either. How will these facilities exchange patient records if there is no method of exchange?

Lack of an Accepted Exchange Standard: Part B in TEFCA designates HL-7’s FHIR standard moving forward, and while FHIR certainly has the early lead and a lot of support, the specific naming of it as a standard makes Halamka and others uncomfortable.

“Maybe a better way to say it is that FHIR enables many new possibilities, rendering a number of historical approaches obsolete,” he said.

No National Directory: There is currently no comprehensive way for providers to find each other should they need to. What’s needed is a “national phone book” that connects providers electronically when they need to exchange patient data.

So, where is the push to close these remaining holes going to come from? Let’s think about who has sufficient incentive to make them happen. Ideally, each of these concerns can be addressed by creative business ideas. Realistically, the free market probably can’t get us across the finish line by itself.

The solution, then, has to be some kind of collaboration between ONC, healthcare and IT vendors that offers proper incentives for facilitating patient data sharing and overcomes industry concerns, which remain. Healthcare IT vendors fear they’ll undermine their own market share by making it easier to share patient data. Hospitals fear losing patients who can easily switch providers without having to provide a complete medical history.

The federal government, however, is the only semi—objective advocate for healthcare IT systems that focus on patients. It’s also the only entity with the funds and heft to get some things on the wish list done. Far from arguing for big government, I am instead promoting dialogue that takes advantage of a healthy tension that empowers each entity to pursue the best possible outcome. If this gets done in a timely fashion, both carrots and sticks are necessary. What other entity has both?

“If interoperability were a ‘stay-in-business’ issue for either vendors or their customers, we would already have it, but overall, the opposite is true,” wrote Julia Adler-Milstein in a NEJM Catalyst article on interoperability. “… the weak regulatory incentives pushing interoperability … even in combination with additional federal and state policy efforts supporting HIE progress, could not offset market incentives slowing it.”

I agree with Halamka and Tripathi that mandating technological solutions is a bad approach in that it shackles ingenuity and picks winners and losers. But there is still a role for government in terms of providing strong incentives, setting realistic deadlines that advance the overall mission more rapidly and perhaps funding certain projects where no business solution is truly viable.

A year since Adler-Milstein’s article was published, we seem to be in the same place, despite the effort TEFCA represents. While foot-dragging may be an effective business tactic, it often forestalls broader public goods. To improve America’s fragmented healthcare system, it’s past time to make that the highest priority.

Irv Lichtenwald is president and CEO of  Medsphere Systems Corporation, the solution provider for the CareVue electronic health record.

Categories:
Interoperability