Events Calendar

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2014 OSEHRA Open Source Summit: Global Collaboration in Health IT
2014-09-03 - 2014-09-05    
8:00 am - 5:00 pm
OSEHRA is an alliance of corporations, agencies, and individuals dedicated to advancing the state of the art in open source electronic health record (EHR) systems [...]
Connected Health Summit
2014-09-04    
All Day
The inaugural Connected Health Summit: Engaging Consumers is the only event focused exclusively on the consumer-focused perspective of the fast-growing digital health/connected health market. The [...]
Health Impact MidWest
2014-09-08    
All Day
The HealthIMPACT Forum is where health system C-Suite Executives meet.  Designed by and for health system leaders like you, it provides an unmatched faculty of [...]
Simulation Summit 2014
2014-09-11    
All Day
Hilton Toronto Downtown | September 11 - 12, 2014 Meeting Location Hilton Toronto Downtown 145 Richmond Street West Toronto, Ontario, M5H 2L2, CANADA Tel: 416-869-3456 [...]
Webinar : EHR: Demand Results!
2014-09-11    
2:00 pm - 2:45 pm
09/11/14 | 2:00 - 2:45 PM ET If you are using an EHR, you deserve the best solution for your money. You need to demand [...]
Healthcare Electronic Point of Service: Automating Your Front Office
2014-09-11    
3:00 pm - 4:00 pm
09/11/14 | 3:00 - 4:00 PM ET Start capitalizing on customer convenience trends today! Today’s healthcare reimbursement models put a greater financial risk on healthcare [...]
e-Patient Connections 2014
2014-09-15    
All Day
e-Patient Connections 2014 Follow Us! @ePatCon2014 Join in the Conversation at #ePatCon The Internet, social media platforms and mobile health applications are enabling patients to take an [...]
Free Webinar - Don’t Be Denied: Avoiding Billing and Coding Errors
2014-09-16    
1:00 pm - 2:00 pm
Tuesday, September 16, 2014 1:00 PM Eastern / 10:00 AM Pacific   Stopping the denial on an individual claim is just the first step. Smart [...]
Health 2.0 Fall Conference 2014
2014-09-21    
12:00 am
We’re back in Santa Clara on September 21-24, 2014 and once again bringing together the best and brightest speakers, newest product demos, and top networking opportunities for [...]
Healthcare Analytics Summit 14
2014-09-24    
All Day
Transforming Healthcare Through Analytics Join top executives and professionals from around the U.S. for a memorable educational summit on the incredibly pressing topic of Healthcare [...]
AHIMA 2014 Convention
2014-09-27    
All Day
As the most extensive exposition in the industry, the AHIMA Convention and Exhibit attracts decision makers and influencers in HIM and HIT. Last year in [...]
2014 Annual Clinical Coding Meeting
2014-09-27    
12:00 am
Event Type: Meeting HIM Domain: Coding Classification and Reimbursement Continuing Education Units Available: 10 Location: San Diego, CA Venue: San Diego Convention Center Faculty: TBD [...]
AHIP National Conferences on Medicare & Medicaid
2014-09-28    
All Day
Balancing your organization’s short- and long-term needs as you navigate the changes in the Medicare and Medicaid programs can be challenging. AHIP’s National Conferences on Medicare [...]
A Behavioral Health Collision At The EHR Intersection
2014-09-30    
2:00 pm - 3:30 pm
Date/Time Date(s) - 09/30/2014 2:00 pm Hear Why Many Organizations Are Changing EHRs In Order To Remain Competitive In The New Value-Based Health Care Environment [...]
Meaningful Use and The Rise of the Portals
2014-10-02    
12:00 pm - 12:45 pm
Meaningful Use and The Rise of the Portals: Best Practices in Patient Engagement Thu, Oct 2, 2014 10:30 PM - 11:15 PM IST Join Meaningful [...]
Events on 2014-09-04
Connected Health Summit
4 Sep 14
San Diego
Events on 2014-09-08
Health Impact MidWest
8 Sep 14
Chicago
Events on 2014-09-15
e-Patient Connections 2014
15 Sep 14
New York
Events on 2014-09-21
Health 2.0 Fall Conference 2014
21 Sep 14
Santa Clara
Events on 2014-09-24
Healthcare Analytics Summit 14
24 Sep 14
Salt Lake City
Events on 2014-09-27
AHIMA 2014 Convention
27 Sep 14
San Diego
Events on 2014-09-28
Events on 2014-09-30
Events on 2014-10-02
Latest News

Making Innovation Work For EHR Integration, Interoperability

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Improving healthcare interoperability will require innovators to move providers beyond their dissatisfaction with early EHR and health IT systems and adopt integrative technologies capable of improving care coordination, delivery, and cost.

Health2047 and EHR integration, interoperability, usability

According to most recent federal data, 97 percent of hospitals and 75 percent of office-based physicians use certified EHR technology. Despite of these high levels of EHR adoption, provider EHR dissatisfaction remains common and the contributing factors manifold.

Given the latter, how does the industry make good on its investments in health IT systems to achieve healthcare interoperability and enable providers and patients to work together to improve the health of individuals and populations?

At Health2047, the solution is bridging the gap between clinicians and developers. The for-profit integrated innovation company got its start thanks for $15 million in funding from founding partner, the American Medical Association (AMA). And its goal? To effect system-level change in United States healthcare, says CEO and Director Doug Given, MD.

Doing so requires bringing together a variety stakeholders — clinicians, developers, investors, etc. — to identify and develop technologies that providers can rapidly adopt and make use of to improve their workflows and the outcomes of their patients.

“We’re looking at things that are integrative and trying to combine insights, ideas, and the capacity to develop and finance those to get them in a home for rapid adoption at scale,” Given tells HealthITInteroperability.com. “You can’t do that with small point solutions.”

The approach embodies lessons learned in previous attempts at using information technology to transform how providers and patients interact.

“One of the key problems with usability that arose from the entire EHR history was a lack of attentiveness to that — and also a lack of specification building,” Given explains. “There just was no requirement to do that because of the way the financing came out through meaningful use. So we ended up with this very incomplete, unsatisfactory, and full-of-friction system that is better than it was before but nowhere near what it could have been.”

A lack of physician input into EHR designed combined with limited EHR usability had a lasting effect on the provider community — one that must be faced head on in the development of new health IT solutions.

“Providers end up being captive to the technology — the technology is making them less efficient — and they’re not having any kind of enthusiasm for the user experience,” Given maintains. “As a consequence, they won’t use the lousy products. The way the lousy product manufacturers put it is that physicians are slow adopters. I’d make the case that they’re really rapid adopters, but they’re a difficult market because if something isn’t useful and as soon as they’ve tried it and seen that, they discard it. You give them a great product and they become among the earliest and most profound adopters.”

Why Health2047 came to be

According to Given, the raison d’être behind the creation of Health2047 was to address three industry-wide challenges: cost inflation, poor return on investment, and decreased productivity.

In order to make rapid adoption possible, the company is bringing the provider community into direct contact with leaders in the tech community.

“The best asset member of each asset class really is who we want as our partners,” Given insists. “Because these groups would be working at the interfaces between the industries, we think the standards would lead to open, scalable, and extendable solutions rather than new siloes and new ways to hide, protect, and sequester data and perpetuate this interoperability problem we all face.”

At the center of the designs the organization is looking to develop is provider-centric usability.

“The innovation process, first of all, needs to be focused on useful modules — that’s the way you get rapid adoption and you don’t have to fight all the entrenched investment that’s sitting there, whether it’s stone-age type infrastructure or not,” Given explains. “Rapid prototyping for clinicians needs to have the input of the clinicians.”

Rather than an incubator or accelerator, Health2047 will develop its own designs for health IT solutions for investors to buy in to. While the goal is to have more than 60 design concepts in 5 years, its near-term goals are more modest: 2 in the first year and 3-4 in the second.

And those earliest concepts will focus on pain points for providers using various forms of health IT, such as interoperability, health data exchange, and provider-patient interaction. While Given declined to go into detail as to the specifics of these concepts, he did not that the emphasis was on modernizing a healthcare ecosystem that was designed for a particular way of doing business.

“As much as 85 percent of the healthcare spend relates to chronic disease now in American, and we’ve still got a legacy system that was set up for acute, institutional, hospital-based, intermittent, and periodic care,” he asserts. “It’s the wrong design for the healthcare burden we have now, which is largely longitudinal with a big emphasis on wellness, prevention, and management over time with behavioral change. The system is not set up to do that effectively. It’s not funded against those objectives.”

Chronic disease is among connected care, the transition to value-based reimbursement, and inefficiencies in workflows and workforce development as the company’s main areas of focus.

Consistent with the aim of system-level change, the beneficiaries of these design concepts will span the care continuum.

“We have a particular interest in not just solutions for the 400 academic medical centers in the country but rather the 3500 or more hospitals that are less than 200 beds, the small- and medium-sized physician practices that don’t have the information system environment to let them function like these highly-geeked-out technical organizations in the big centers,” Given adds.

Effecting change in healthcare via healthcare IT is a tall order and many have failed. But how many of these gambles had a direct line to a body of physicians? And while it’s too soon to speculate about the long-term prospects of Health2047, its near-term focus on EHR integration, interoperability, and usability is right in line with the causes of physician frustration with health IT.

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