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Bruker Corporation to Present at the 37th Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference
Bruker Corporation (NASDAQ: BRKR) announced today it will participate in the 37th annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco. Frank Laukien, Chairman, President & CEO and Gerald Herman, CFO [...]
Allergan to Present at the 37th Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference
2019-01-07    
3:30 pm
Allergan plc (NYSE: AGN), a leading global biopharmaceutical company, today announced that Chairman and CEO Brent Saunders will present at the 37th Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco, [...]
Johnson & Johnson to Participate in 37th Annual JP Morgan Health Care Conference
2019-01-07    
3:30 pm
Johnson & Johnson (NYSE: JNJ) will participate in the 37th Annual JP Morgan Health Care Conference on Monday, Jan. 7th, at the Westin St. Francis in San Francisco.  Joseph J. [...]
Halozyme Therapeutics To Present At The 37th Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference
2019-01-09    
10:30 am
Halozyme Therapeutics, Inc. (NASDAQ: HALO), a biotechnology company developing novel oncology and drug-delivery therapies, will be presenting at the 37th Annual J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San [...]
International Conference on Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and Chemical Process
2019-01-30 - 2019-01-31    
All Day
It is a great pleasure and an honor to extend to you a warm invitation to attend the "International Conference on Chemistry, Chemical Engineering and [...]
Streamline HCP Workflow • Drive Patient Education • Navigate the Specialty Prescribing Landscape
2019-02-01    
12:00 am
The original and most comprehensive conference series dedicated entirely to strategies for effective utilization of e-Rx and EHR technologies is back for 2019. Whether new [...]
Articles

Jan 10: Accountable care requires more health IT than just EHRs

ehr systems

Meeting the goals of accountable care and achieving the associated cost reductions requires a more robust health IT infrastructure than just an electronic health record can provide, says a report by IDC Health Insights.  The triple aim of improving the patient experience, improving population health, and slashing system-wide costs can only be realized when healthcare organizations incorporate advanced technology and embrace the principles of value-based healthcare that provides the foundation for accountable care organizations (ACOs).

While pay-for-performance efforts have struggled in the past, the new wealth of data available through increasingly common health IT systems like practice management software and EHRs can provide actionable insights that were missing in the days of paper charts and manila folders. “Foundational applications that are used to run the day-to-day business of providers and health plans must be in place because they represent an important source of much of the data required for population health management,” the report says.
“The integration of clinical data (EMR encounter, lab, pharmacy) and claims data (clinical and financial) offers the ability to create a 360-degree view of a patient’s and population’s health status,” the brief continues.  “Increasingly, healthcare organizations are identifying nonclinical drivers of adverse events and are incorporating non-healthcare data.  For example, an asthma patient who continued to return to the emergency room was discovered to have considerable mold and dust in his home, so a cleaning service was deployed to create a clean environment. As a result, the patient’s ER use dropped to zero.”
The harmonization of systems such as computerized physician order entry, billing and enrollment management, and health information exchange can help achieve similar financial and clinical results to ACOs in the Pioneer Program.  Pioneer ACOs reported a gross savings of $87.6 million in 2012 while achieving significantly lower rates of 30-day readmissions.  The ACOs also achieved desirable results on clinical quality measures addressing blood pressure and cholesterol control, posting numbers significantly higher than the national average.
But even technology that goes above and beyond the basic data capture functionalities of the EHR isn’t enough.  Organizational change must accompany health IT adoption.  A sustained commitment to change, starting with the backing of the executive board, is required in order to appropriately allocate financial and employee resources.
“Many organizations have underestimated the degree of change, which has limited success,” warns the report.  “Provider organizations are particularly challenged with the new skills that are required for population health management, including the use of claims data and understanding what it can and cannot do, organizing and managing a team approach to care, matching patients with the right interventions, designing and evaluating interventions, strategizing to engage patients, and managing a risk contract.” Source