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12:00 AM - HLTH 2019
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01 Oct
2019-10-01 - 2019-10-02    
All Day
The UK’s leading health technology and smart health event, bringing together a specialist audience of over 4,000 health and care professionals covering IT and clinical [...]
08 Oct
2019-10-08 - 2019-10-09    
12:00 am
Looking to maximize the efficiency of your current Revenue Cycle solution? Join us as we present strategies for analyzing your MEDITECH Revenue Cycle, and learn from other [...]
2019 Southwest Dental Conference
2019-10-10 - 2019-10-11    
All Day
ABOUT 2019 SOUTHWEST DENTAL CONFERENCE For 91 years, the Southwest Dental Conference has been the meeting of choice for quality professional development and innovative educational [...]
Annual Conference & Exhibition Lyotalk USA 2019
2019-10-10 - 2019-10-11    
All Day
ABOUT ANNUAL CONFERENCE & EXHIBITION LYOTALK USA 2019 Lyotalk is USA’s largest annual conference on Lyophilization/Freeze Drying. Lyotalk attracts gathering from of 150+ experts from [...]
Lab Indonesia 2019
2019-10-10 - 2019-10-12    
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ABOUT LAB INDONESIA 2019 LabAsia is Southeast Asia’s leading laboratory exhibition, serving as the region’s trade platform for laboratory equipment & services suppliers to engage [...]
30th International Conference on Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology
2019-10-11 - 2019-10-12    
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ABOUT 30TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CLINICAL AND EXPERIMENTAL OPHTHALMOLOGY The 30th International Conference on Clinical and Experimental Ophthalmology is going to be held during October [...]
7th International Conference on Cosmetology & Beauty 2019
Cosmetology and Beauty 2019 passionately welcomes each one of you to attend a global conference in the field of cosmetology which is held on October [...]
16 Oct
2019-10-16 - 2019-10-17    
All Day
ABOUT 17TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON CANCER RESEARCH AND THERAPY Cancer Research Conference 2019 coordinates addressing the principal themes and in addition inevitable methodologies of oncology. [...]
Global Cardio Diabetes Conclave 2019
2019-10-18 - 2019-10-20    
All Day
ABOUT GLOBAL CARDIO DIABETES CONCLAVE 2019 A strong correlation between cardiovascular diseases and diabetes is now well established. The American Heart Association considers that individuals [...]
2019 Rehabilitation Medicine Society of Australia and New Zealand
2019-10-20 - 2019-10-23    
All Day
ABOUT 2019 REHABILITATION MEDICINE SOCIETY OF AUSTRALIA AND NEW ZEALAND On behalf of Rehabilitation Medicine Society of Australia and New Zealand (RMSANZ) and the organising [...]
21 Oct
2019-10-21 - 2019-10-23    
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ABOUT GLOBAL CONFERENCE ON SURGERY AND ANESTHESIA (GCSA 2019) Global Conference on Surgery and Anesthesia (GCSA 2019) scheduled on October 21-23 2019 in Dubai, UAE [...]
21 Oct
2019-10-21 - 2019-10-22    
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ABOUT 10TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON MASS SPECTROMETRY AND CHROMATOGRAPHY ME Conferences is excited to announce the “10th International Conference on Mass Spectrometry and Chromatography” that [...]
MEDICAL JAPAN 2019 TOKYO
2019-10-23 - 2019-10-25    
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ABOUT MEDICAL JAPAN 2019 TOKYO B to B Trade Show Covering All the Products/Services/Technologies in the Healthcare Industry! MEDICAL JAPAN TOKYO, a sister show of [...]
15th ACAM Laser and Cosmetic Medicine Conference 2019
2019-10-23 - 2019-10-25    
All Day
ABOUT 15TH ACAM LASER AND COSMETIC MEDICINE CONFERENCE 2019 As the new president of ACAM, I am delighted to welcome you all to the 15th [...]
23rd European Nephrology Conference
2019-10-24 - 2019-10-25    
All Day
ABOUT 23RD EUROPEAN NEPHROLOGY CONFERENCE Theme: The Imminent of Nephrology: Current & Advance Approaches to treat Kidney Diseases 23rd European Nephrology Conference is the world’s [...]
FNCE 2019 Food & Nutrition Conference & Expo
2019-10-26 - 2019-10-29    
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ABOUT FNCE 2019 – FOOD & NUTRITION CONFERENCE & EXPO Experience dynamic educational opportunities not available elsewhere. Gain access to new trends, perspectives from expert [...]
HLTH 2019
2019-10-27 - 2019-10-30    
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ABOUT HLTH 2019 HLTH is the largest and most important conference for health innovation. It’s an unprecedented, large-scale forum for collaboration across senior leaders from [...]
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8 Oct 19
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Global Cardio Diabetes Conclave 2019
18 Oct 19
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HLTH 2019
27 Oct 19
Las Vegas
Articles

FHIR will not save us. We need national patient identifiers.

FHIR will not save us We need national patient identifiers.

Article by Irv Lichtenwald, Medsphere Systems Corporation

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

“You build a mountain, you stand on top of it and see a bigger mountain that you can go and stand on top of,” Grieve said in an interview with HIStalk. “The urgent need to build bigger mountains never goes away. We’ll just keep climbing up the stack towards a useful system.”

Setting aside the idea of “building” mountains, Grieve is describing something very familiar to seasoned hikers and climbers—a false summit. When you are so close to the mountain, and we are all so very close to health IT and the constant interoperability updates, it’s impossible to see the higher peaks in the distance.

Which begs the question: When will we summit this range?

“Each mountain is about a 10 to 15 year building process,” Grieve says. “That’s how it has gone historically.”

In other words, we probably can’t even see the next peak from where we’re standing, the initial false summit still looming above us.

In his conversation with Mr. HIStalk, Grieve makes a compelling argument for modifying expectations, working diligently and putting all the pieces in place to ensure future success.

For example, Grieve is working on HL7’s Fast Healthcare Interoperability Resources (FHIR, pronounced “fire”) specification enabling EHRs to exchange information. If you’re one of the many that hope FHIR becomes healthcare’s silver bullet, Grieve would like you to rethink that expectation.

“There’s people out there who think that with FHIR we’ve solved all the problems,” he says. “We haven’t, because we’re not authorized to solve lots of the problems.”

Primary among these other problems is the lack of a single patient identifier via a Master Patient Index (MPI) for use across the American healthcare system. Quite simply, FHIR alone is not a fix.

“Yup. MPI is unavoidable,” Grieve told Forbes blogger and author Dan Munro, whose analysis of interoperability and MPI is highly valuable and relevant (see, for example, automobile industry reference and link below).

And why don’t we have MPI in place already? Because in 1998, long before interoperability approached Kardashian-like frequency on the Internet, Congress passed and President Clinton signed a law forbidding federal funding of any effort to create national patient identifiers. This was two years after Congress mandated the creation of a patient identifier when they passed HIPAA.

(Staying with the mountain metaphor, one might believe the two years between legislative acts were the peak of health IT lobbying and campaign contributions.)

As we all know, incentives for EHR adoption have expanded the use of health IT platforms to somewhere in the neighborhood of 75 percent. But with few standards for exchanging patient data, we’ve created silos of patient information and a system that still benefits just about everyone in it more than the patient. Health IT vendors have enriched themselves with tax dollars. Hospitals are using EHRs to keep patients from going elsewhere and gobbling up small physician practices. Status quo incentives remain for influential segments of the overall health IT marketplace.

As former hospital CEO and THCB blogger Paul Levy wrote, “We’ve been swindled.”

And it’s not like this kind of situation is completely new. People are not cars, to be sure, but a similar scenario endured until 1981 in the automobile industry. Chaos convinced the National Transportation Safety Administration (NTSA) to implement the national Vehicle Identification Number (VIN) system to more effectively track thefts, accidents, damages and recalls. The use of VIN numbers also makes businesses like CARFAX possible.

It’s clear that VIN numbers enabled the NTSA to more actively and accurately track the sale and registration of autos. It’s also clear that automakers had no financial incentive to resist the national standard other than to avoid accurate tracking of defects that could put driver safety at risk, making VIN implementation as much a moral issue as anything else.

National schemes? A moral component? Congressional discretion? That scenario should sound familiar to you.

Indeed, as quoted in Bob Wachter’s book The Digital Doctor, UCSF Medical Center CIO Michael Blum called Congress’s failure to establish a universal patient ID “the biggest single failure in the history of health IT legislation.”

“Our national interest does not coincide with those corporate strategic interests,” says Levy.

In other words, what patients lack is an organized lobby, which is unfortunate since it seems that all roads on the health IT progress roadmap eventually lead back to Congress.

“There’s a number of industries where they have data sharing arrangements of one kind or another,” says Grieve. “Those things are possible and they work to some degree. They need some kind of governmental interference or mandate to make them happen. Very often, most of those industries wouldn’t go back to the chaos they had before.”

This is disconcerting. On the one hand, the current Congress is passing legislation like the 21st Century Cures Act that mandates interoperability without mandating a certain standard. On the other, a previous Congress avoided the responsibility of creating the prerequisite for interoperability in a national patient identifier.

“Standards arise in a broken market,” Grieve told HIStalk. “We’re trying to move the market to a better, stable place.”

We have one prerequisite—a broken market. We need Congress to implement the other—a national identifier. Yes, an adoptable data exchange standard like FHIR is necessary, but without a national patient identifier it is not sufficient. Until then, every goal we achieve in the foreseeable future will be a false summit.

Source Medsphere