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7:30 AM - HLTH 2025
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12:00 AM - NextGen UGM 2025
TigerConnect + eVideon Unite Healthcare Communications
2025-09-30    
10:00 am
TigerConnect’s acquisition of eVideon represents a significant step forward in our mission to unify healthcare communications. By combining smart room technology with advanced clinical collaboration [...]
Pathology Visions 2025
2025-10-05 - 2025-10-07    
8:00 am - 5:00 pm
Elevate Patient Care: Discover the Power of DP & AI Pathology Visions unites 800+ digital pathology experts and peers tackling today's challenges and shaping tomorrow's [...]
AHIMA25  Conference
2025-10-12 - 2025-10-14    
9:00 am - 10:00 pm
Register for AHIMA25  Conference Today! HI professionals—Minneapolis is calling! Join us October 12-14 for AHIMA25 Conference, the must-attend HI event of the year. In a city known for its booming [...]
HLTH 2025
2025-10-17 - 2025-10-22    
7:30 am - 12:00 pm
One of the top healthcare innovation events that brings together healthcare startups, investors, and other healthcare innovators. This is comparable to say an investor and [...]
Federal EHR Annual Summit
2025-10-21 - 2025-10-23    
9:00 am - 10:00 pm
The Federal Electronic Health Record Modernization (FEHRM) office brings together clinical staff from the Department of Defense, Department of Veterans Affairs, Department of Homeland Security’s [...]
NextGen UGM 2025
2025-11-02 - 2025-11-05    
12:00 am
NextGen UGM 2025 is set to take place in Nashville, TN, from November 2 to 5 at the Gaylord Opryland Resort & Convention Center. This [...]
Events on 2025-10-05
Events on 2025-10-12
AHIMA25  Conference
12 Oct 25
Minnesota
Events on 2025-10-17
HLTH 2025
17 Oct 25
Nevada
Events on 2025-10-21
Events on 2025-11-02
NextGen UGM 2025
2 Nov 25
TN
Articles

Sep 10 : Health IT Interoperability Requires Industry Collaboration

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For data and systems interoperability to become widespread, both government and private stakeholders must clear roadblocks.

As we approach National Health IT Week, it is a good time to take into consideration how we, as active members within our own healthcare organizations, can help forge a path that results in true healthcare interoperability.

The healthcare industry is at a critical point — although interoperability is poised to radically transform the healthcare system, achieving it poses unique challenges and barriers to success that are problematic around the world. Will true healthcare interoperability ever happen? I think it will. But first, key industry players must collaborate — not simply rely on our national agenda — to achieve it.

Progress recently has been achieved at a federal level; at the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT’s recent monthly HIT Policy Committee meeting, three-, six- and 10-year interoperability milestone plans were laid out, with the goal of achieving more efficient health information exchange, improving industry quality and lowering costs, and incorporating medical devices and patient-generated health data, both to increase automation of exchange and to scale broadly across the country.

In the US, however, all stakeholders, including healthcare, share responsibility for driving innovation. Typically, when innovative approaches are supported and advanced, industry requires extended time to align and vendors to engage. Healthcare is extremely complex, and is built upon a long history of siloed efforts. It’s time for all industry stakeholders to collectively recognize the barriers to interoperability — whether core technical standards, certification of health IT products and services, regulations around business, clinical and cultural aspects of healthcare, or privacy and security protections– and take charge of identifying potential solutions. This collaborative industry-wide approach will go far to minimize roadblocks, by adopting and implementing standards that advance widespread interoperability.

Within nursing, for example, efforts are underway to map the multiple nursing terminologies approved by the American Nurses Association to the nationally endorsed standards of SNOMED-CT and LOINC. While this effort is not without its challenges, nursing leaders are committed to working toward a future when the benefits of sharable, comparable data can be realized.

Once industry stakeholders collaborate to achieve true healthcare interoperability, there are significant areas that will realize immediate improvement. Specifically, there is tremendous opportunity within the mobile space; thus far the industry has achieved only basic interoperability standards to support and safeguard data exchanged via mobile devices. Yet apps are being rapidly developed — 142 million mobile apps are expected to be downloaded by 2016 — and industry leaders must ensure that information is safeguarded, and access to patient identification is accurate and protected. In a rapidly evolving space like mobile, it is crucial that interoperability standards are flexible and easily implementable so the deployment process is simple and remains up-to-date with mobile developments.

True healthcare interoperability will make a significant, lasting impact on the healthcare system and will bring healthcare delivery to a far more advanced level. Individuals will more consistently trust that their caregivers and clinicians have access to the information necessary to provide accurate and efficient care whether in a hospital, home health center, retail clinic, or physician’s office.

Interoperability will enable a learning health system in which data is accessible and standardized, and can be exchanged and understood once received. Patients will learn from the outcomes that have been achieved for specific treatments and be able to make informed decisions based on that understanding. We are all stakeholders in advancing interoperability in healthcare, and the time is now to start working together toward that desired end state.

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