Events Calendar

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Natural, Traditional & Alternative Medicine
2021-06-07 - 2021-06-08    
All Day
Natural, Traditional and Alternative Medicine mainly focuses on the latest and exciting innovations in every area of Natural Medicine & Natural Products, Complementary and Alternative [...]
Advances In Natural Medicines, Nutraceuticals & Neurocognition
2021-06-11 - 2021-06-12    
All Day
The two-days meeting goes to be an occurrence to appear forward to for its enlightening symposiums & workshops from established consultants of the sphere, exceptional [...]
Automation and Artificial Intelligence
2021-06-15 - 2021-06-16    
All Day
Conference Series invites all the experts and researchers from the Automation and Artificial Intelligence sector all over the world to attend “2nd International Conference on [...]
Green Chemistry and Technology 2021
2021-06-23 - 2021-06-24    
All Day
Green Chemistry and Technology is a global overview with the Theme:: “Sustainable Chemistry and its key role in waste management and essential public service to [...]
Food Science & Nutrition
2021-06-25 - 2021-06-26    
All Day
Food Science is a multi-disciplinary field involving chemistry, biochemistry, nutrition, microbiology, and engineering to give one the scientific knowledge to solve real problems associated with [...]
Food Safety and Health
2021-06-28 - 2021-06-29    
All Day
The main objective is to bring all the leading academic scientists, researchers and research scholars together to exchange and share their experiences and research results [...]
Food Microbiology
2021-06-28 - 2021-06-29    
All Day
This conference provide a platform to share the new ideas and advancing technologies in the field of Food Microbiology and Food Technology. The objective of [...]
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Latest News

Apr 05: Electronic Health Record Tracking System Fails to Gain Federal Support

electronic health records

Health information technologies such as smartphone-based ultrasound and electronic health records should be regulated according to the risk they present to patients, per a proposed strategy rolled out Thursday by three federal agencies. The report, which is still subject to public comment, did not call for an extension of regulatory power for the agencies. Instead it emphasized the need for voluntary collaboration and planning by public-private partners. “Nongovernmental, independent programs to perform conformity assessments should be developed to fill current gaps,” it recommended. “The Agencies view this strategy rather than a formal regulatory approach as the appropriate method for advancing conformity assessments.”

The recommendations from the Food and Drug Administration, the Federal Communications Commission and the Dept. of Health & Human Services’ Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC) were largely aligned with those that were issued by an advisory committee last year that sought to strike a balance between innovation and safety monitoring. The agencies state in the report that instead of regulating these technologies by their platform, say a mobile phone versus a computer, their level of regulation should be determined by their functionality and the threat they pose to patients.

The report fell short of providing needed safety mechanisms to capture errors in electronic medical records, a vulnerability which Scientific American pointed out in an editorial in the October edition of the magazine. (Read it here). Scientific American editors wrote that this congressionally-mandated action would have been the perfect opportunity to call for setting up a system much-like the National Transportation Safety Board only for electronic health records – designed to catch and fix medical mistakes such as misreported lab tests or incorrect prescriptions.

The plans included in the draft report today instead suggested setting up a general Health IT Safety Center, a public-private entity created by multiple federal agencies and health IT private partners to “serve as a trusted convener of health IT stakeholders” that would “focus on activities that promote health IT as an integral part of patient safety with the ultimate goal of assisting in the creation of a sustainable, integrated health IT learning system.”  It was very vague on details, however, and did not lay out any specific plans for how such a system would cull information on EHR errors, or fix them.

The congressionally-mandated report lays out plans to help ensure there were “better analytics to help address some of those safety issues,” Jodi Daniel, director of the Office of Planning and Policy at ONC, told Scientific American when it asked about this issue. The report is not yet in its final form. It will still be subject to a public meeting in May and a 90-day comment period, both of which will help solidify details about what such a safety infrastructure could look like.

Source