Events Calendar

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10th Asian Conference on Emergency Medicine (ACEM 2019)
ABOUT 10TH ASIAN CONFERENCE ON EMERGENCY MEDICINE (ACEM 2019) It is a great pleasure and an honor to extend to you a warm invitation to [...]
APAPU SPUNZA Conference 2019
2019-11-08 - 2019-11-10    
All Day
ABOUT APAPU/ SPUNZA CONFERENCE 2019 We look forward to welcoming you to the combined APAPU/ SPUNZA meeting in Perth – the first time the event [...]
2nd World Cosmetic and Dermatology Congress
2019-11-11 - 2019-11-12    
All Day
ABOUT 2ND WORLD COSMETIC AND DERMATOLOGY CONGRESS 2nd World Cosmetic and Dermatology Congress is going to be held at Helsinki, Finland during November 11-12, 2019. International Congress on Cosmetic [...]
Global Experts Meet on Advanced Technologies in Diabetes Research and Therapy
2019-11-11 - 2019-11-12    
All Day
ABOUT GLOBAL EXPERTS MEET ON ADVANCED TECHNOLOGIES IN DIABETES RESEARCH AND THERAPY It is an incredible delight and a respect to stretch out our warm [...]
Global Congress on Cancer Immunology and Epigenetics
2019-11-13 - 2019-11-14    
All Day
ABOUT GLOBAL CONGRESS ON CANCER IMMUNOLOGY AND EPIGENETICS Epigenetics Conference, The world’s largest Epigenetics Conference and Gathering for the Research Community. Join the Global Congress [...]
Advantage Healthcare-India 2019
ABOUT ADVANTAGE HEALTHCARE-INDIA 2019 ADVANTAGES OF HEALTHCARE AND WELLNESS INDUSTRY IN INDIA: State of the art Hospitals with Excellent Infrastructure Largest pool of Highly qualified [...]
4th International Conference on Obstetrics and Gynecology
2019-11-14 - 2019-11-15    
All Day
ABOUT 4TH INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OBSTETRICS AND GYNECOLOGY Theme: Current Breakthroughs and Innovative Approaches towards Improving Women’s Reproductive HealthIt’s our pleasure to invite all the [...]
Encompass Health at AAPM&R 2019 in San Antonio
2019-11-15 - 2019-11-17    
All Day
Encompass Health at AAPM&R 2019 in San Antonio San Antonio, Texas Nov 14, 2019 11:00 a.m. CST Headed to AAPM&R’s 2019 Annual Assembly? Swing by [...]
7th Annual Congress on Dental Medicine and Orthodontics
ABOUT 7TH ANNUAL CONGRESS ON DENTAL MEDICINE AND ORTHODONTICS Dentistry Medicine 2019 is a perfect opportunity intended for International well-being Dental and Oral experts too. [...]
ABOUT MEDICA 2019
2019-11-18 - 2019-11-21    
All Day
ABOUT MEDICA 2019   MEDICA is the world’s largest event for the medical sector. For more than 40 years it has been firmly established on [...]
7th Annual Congress on Dental Medicine and Orthodontics
2019-11-18 - 2019-11-19    
All Day
ABOUT 7TH ANNUAL CONGRESS ON DENTAL MEDICINE AND ORTHODONTICS Dentistry Medicine 2019 is a perfect opportunity intended for International well-being Dental and Oral experts too. [...]
20 Nov
2019-11-20 - 2019-11-21    
All Day
  Connected Insurance: The USA’s Premier Gathering Defining the Future of Insurance Since the year 2000, 50 percent of the Fortune 500 companies have disappeared [...]
International Conference on Pathology and Infectious Diseases
2019-11-21 - 2019-11-22    
All Day
ABOUT INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON PATHOLOGY AND INFECTIOUS DISEASES Infectious disease 2019 gathers the world’s leading scientists, researchers and scholars to exchange and share their professional [...]
15th Asian-Pacific Congress of Hypertension 2019
2019-11-24 - 2019-11-27    
All Day
ABOUT 15TH ASIAN-PACIFIC CONGRESS OF HYPERTENSION 2019 The Asian-Pacific Society of Hypertension will hold the 15th Asian Pacific Congress of Hypertension (APCH2019) in Brisbane, Australia, [...]
18th Annual Conference on Urology and Nephrological Disorders
2019-11-25 - 2019-11-26    
All Day
ABOUT 18TH ANNUAL CONFERENCE ON UROLOGY AND NEPHROLOGICAL DISORDERS Urology 2019 is an integration of the science, theory and clinical knowledge for the purpose of [...]
2nd World Heart Rhythm Conference
2019-11-25 - 2019-11-26    
All Day
ABOUT 2ND WORLD HEART RHYTHM CONFERENCE 2nd World Heart Rhythm Conference is among the World’s driving Scientific Conference to unite worldwide recognized scholastics in the [...]
Digital Health Forum 2019
ABOUT DIGITAL HEALTH FORUM 2019 Join us on 26-27 November in Berlin to discuss the power of AI and ML for healthcare, healthcare transformation by [...]
2nd Global Nursing Conference & Expo
ABOUT 2ND GLOBAL NURSING CONFERENCE & EXPO Events Ocean extends an enthusiastic and sincere welcome to the 2nd GLOBAL NURSING CONFERENCE & EXPO ’19. The [...]
International Conference on Obesity and Diet Imbalance 2019
2019-11-28 - 2019-11-29    
All Day
ABOUT INTERNATIONAL CONFERENCE ON OBESITY AND DIET IMBALANCE 2019 Obesity Diet 2019 is a worldwide stage to examine and find out concerning Weight Management, Childhood [...]
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20 Nov
20 Nov 19
Chicago
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15th Asian-Pacific Congress of Hypertension 2019
24 Nov 19
Merivale St & Glenelg Street
Events on 2019-11-26
Digital Health Forum 2019
26 Nov 19
Marinelli Rd Rockville
Events on 2019-11-28
Latest News

Should CMS Nix Stage 2 Meaningful Use Patient Engagement

healthcare organizations

Are the patient engagement requirements in Stage 2 meaningful use just too hard for providers to achieve?  CMS seems to think so.  Healthcare organizations are finding the five percent patient engagement threshold to be a stumbling block for Stage 2 attestation, the agency says in a new proposed rule that would make significant changes to the EHR Incentive Programs, and cutting the requirement would help more organizations successfully attest and avoid negative payment adjustments.

The five percent patient engagement measure has always been a worry for providers who dislike the idea of being held financially accountable for what patients do on their own time.  While many providers have successfully cajoled their patients into viewing, downloading, or transmitting their personal health information through patient portals, others have told CMS neither the technology nor the interest are sufficient to clear the bar.

“Providers and system developers have noted…an overall immaturity in the market with health IT equipped with the functions required to support the transmission of health information by a patient or the delivery of a secure message from a patient to a third party,” the proposed rule says.

Instead of pinning patient engagement at five percent, the new regulations would only require eligible providers to record one single patient viewing or transmitting their health data during their reporting period in order to meet the objective.  Eligible hospitals would need to do the same for just one discharged patient.  Instead of a five percent threshold for secure messaging, providers would simply have to prove that they had the ability to send and receive messages enabled during their reporting period.

This would require providers to implement basic patient engagement technologies, but would not place an undue burden on workflows or patient education for those organizations that have challenging populations to work with.

Many organizations have noted that the patients who would most benefit from becoming more engaged in their own healthcare, such as low-income populations who are prone to chronic diseases, poor health literacy, and uncertain access to the healthcare system, lack critical tools like reliable home internet access or smartphones that make patient engagement easier for more tech-savvy consumers.

Other advocates note that the all-or-nothing threshold does not take into account improvement over time or the effort it takes to get most of the way to the finish line.  Robert Tennant, Senior Policy Advisor at the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA), recalls testimony from a recent Senate hearing on health IT progress.

“One of the witnesses, who owns a small family practice in Nebraska, said he only had two hours to go before the reporting deadline, and they were two patients short of meeting their secure messaging threshold,” Tennant told HealthITAnalytics.com.  “So he had to call up these two patients and essentially beg them to send a message, even if it was something irrelevant like the scores to a basketball game.”

“You take a step back and it’s kind of funny, but also it’s disconcerting that the whole point of this program, which is to provide better quality care to patients, isn’t helping us find that,” he added.  “We’re finding that physicians are checking boxes, trying to meet the requirements to avoid getting penalized, and that is simply wrong.”

CHIME and AMDIS expressed similar concerns, condemning the strict yes-or-no framework that has been so challenging to providers during Stage 2.  “We are disappointed by a missed opportunity to remove the largest remaining barrier to long-term programmatic success: namely, the need to address the program’s “pass/fail” construct,” the two organizations said in a joint statement.

“Now that we are well into the penalty phase of the program, we do not believe providers who make good-faith efforts should be penalized for missing 1 percent on one threshold. Rather, policymakers should acknowledge providers who invest resources to become meaningful users, but fall short of perfection, by limiting penalties to those providers who clearly did not make the effort.”

CMS is using the modification as a way to acknowledge that something is amiss with the way patient engagement is included in meaningful use.  “We believe these changes would allow providers the necessary time to work toward patient education about the availability of these resources as well as allowing the industry as a whole time to develop a stronger infrastructure supporting patient engagement,” the rule says.

However, some patient engagement advocates immediately expressed their displeasure with the suggestion that engagement is somehow less important to meaningful use than any of the other, unchanged measures.  Patient engagement is seen as a key part of achieving the Triple Aim, and has been heavily stressed up until this point as a way to manage population health and reduce the costs of chronic disease management.

Former ONC chief Dr. Farzad Mostashari, a stalwart proponent of patient engagement, lashed out at the suggestion during a pre-conference session at HIMSS15.  “For the first time, I’m taking issue” with a meaningful use rule, he said.  “I think we need to show the policymakers that they’re not just pushing rope here. We need to show that there’s demand.”  Mostashari and others are planning a “day of action” that will try to show regulators that patients themselves are eager to get involved with their own care, and that the healthcare system is responsible for providing the tools, expertise, and commitment to allow them to do so.

“Patients are not an advocacy group,” he said. “They are not a special interest. They’re why we do this.”  The theme is likely to be repeated as the 60-day comment period for the proposed changes opens up this week.  A group called the Alliance4Health has opened a petition on Change.org to urge CMS to reconsider its ruling, noting how patient engagement can reduce data integrity errors, increase patient safety, and keep the channels of communication open between caregivers, patients, and providers.

“Patients are critical members of their own care teams and we need full and equal access to same health data that everyone else on our care team has and much of that information is now contained in EHRs,” the petition says.

CMS and the ONC don’t disagree with that premise, countered current National Coordinator Dr. Karen DeSalvo in a media briefingat HIMSS15. “Our commitment to consumers and free access to their health information is unwavering.  It is thematic and central for me as a doctor and as a person that the control is meaningful and that they are able to be engaged not just by looking, but by having bi-directional engagement with the record.”

“What’s really exciting about the last few days is the dialogue that’s ensued and what’s going to be essential is that advocacy representatives for consumers sit down and talk with providers to understand technology and cultural challenges,” said DeSalvo. “What we need to do is to find some shared solutions and they probably exist technologically today. Some of this is also about culture. The dialogue is good, and I think it’s gotten a lot of important attention. We need to find out the right path for it.”

The drastic reduction in Stage 2 does not bode well for the 25 percent threshold included in the Stage 3 meaningful use rule, which was instantly viewed with skepticism upon release.  Will Stage 3 see a similar downgrade before 2018 rolls around?  Or will CMS take into account ongoing gripes about the “check box” mentality of the EHR Incentive Programs and overhaul the requirements all together, allowing providers to submit their progress and efforts as proof that they are taking patient engagement seriously?

Healthcare stakeholders who wish to submit their opinions on the issue may do so during the 60-day open comment period by clicking here.

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