Showing posts with label ICT. Show all posts
Showing posts with label ICT. Show all posts

Monday, December 08, 2008

Electronic Health (e-Health) Resources


Online e-Health Literature Catalogue
(Departmental Library, Health Canada)
+ A fully searchable catalogue providing access to more than 4 000 full text reports, papers, periodicals, and journal articles from Canada, the United States, Australia, the United Kingdom and Europe. Topics include telehealth and telemedicine, protection of personal health information, electronic health records, legislation, standards, and major current health policy documents which have an impact on the use of ICTs in health.


Health Technology Assessment (HTA) Database
(NHS Centre for Reviews and Dissemination, University of York, United Kingdom in collaboration with International Network of Agencies for Health Technology Asssessment (INAHTA.))
+ Includes technology assessment publications related to projects being conducted by members of INAHTA. Note: Many of the publications records links to original papers or executive summaries.



Telemedicine Bibliographic Database
(Telemedicine Information Exchange, Portland, Oregon, U.S.A).
+ Bibliographic database which provides access to citations of articles on telemedicine, many with abstracts; frequent updates. Note: Contains over 12,000 article citations with many available for online purchase and delivery.

Friday, December 05, 2008

4th Annual Canadian Health Informatics Awards






The 4th Annual Canadian Health Informatics Awards Gala, held on November 19, 2008 at the Sheraton Centre in Toronto, celebrated the outstanding achievements and excellence in the Canadian Health Informatics Community. ITAC Health (formerly CHITTA, Health Division of ITAC) and COACH: Canada’s Health Informatics Association co-hosted the gala.

Congratulations to:


The Gala celebrated the following outstanding achievements:

2008 COMPANY OF THE YEAR
Winner: Telus Health Solutions

2008 HEALTHCARE TRANSFORMATION
Winner: Agfa HealthCare

2008 PROJECT IMPLEMENTATION TEAM OF THE YEAR
Winner: Xwave Healthcare & Cancer Care Ontario

2008 CORPORATE CITIZENSHIP

+ MULTINATIONAL CORPORATIONS
Winner: Agfa HealthCare

+ SMALL TO MEDIUM ENTERPRISE
Winner: Ormed Information Systems

View 2008 AWARDS GALA PHOTOS

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ABOUT ITAC

The Information Technology Association of Canada (ITAC) is the voice of the Canadian information and communications technologies (ICT) industry. ITAC represents a diverse ICT community spanning telecommunications and internet services, ICT consulting services, hardware, microelectronics, software and electronic content. ITAC's community of companies accounts for more than 70 per cent of the 572,000 jobs, $140.5 billion in revenue, $6.0 billion in R&D investment, $31.4 billion in exports and $11.4 billion in capital expenditures that the ICT industry contributes annually to the Canadian economy. ITAC is a prominent advocate for the expansion of Canada's innovative capacity and for stronger productivity across all sectors through the strategic use of technology.

To view a list of ITAC Members click here.

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White Paper: The Critical Role of Integrated Patient Information in the Delivery of High Quality Healthcare


Find out how an SOA-based solution for HIE and interoperability can provide both caregivers and applications with comprehensive and accurate integrated patient information that facilitates the delivery of high quality healthcare. Download the White Paper.

The Promise of eHealth 2.0 | Clinical Portal Technology





The past few years have been busy ones for those involved with automation of processes within the healthcare industry.

As a result of these efforts, people everywhere are increasingly benefiting from web-based information technology, and savvy web-users are finding the outdated information systems traditionally associated with delivering healthcare nonsensical. Antiquated systems and processes combined with poor information flow are increasingly resulting in under-use, and misuse of healthcare services. Add to this the pressure from the full spectrum of consumers, payers, and policy makers, and all eyes are on the sources of wasted resources, operational inefficiencies, and unsafe care.

The call for a significant restructuring of our healthcare system is coming from the highest levels of government, demanding that the industry take advantage of the time, cost, and resource efficiencies promised by healthcare information technology– including electronic health/ medical records (EHR/EMR) and web-based information exchange.

To put the fundamentals in place requires investment; however, returns would be enormous in the form of improved quality of care, better safety and greater productivity.

Healthcare executives today have a unique challenge in responding to the e-Health call to arms, as even new systems may also create inefficiencies and added risk to patients if not utilized properly. Somehow, leaders must enable their organizations to evolve while simultaneously protecting the financial stability of the institution and the well being of the patients. This includes providing the modern tools, training and support required to move forward and evolve their health delivery platform.

This can be accomplished incrementally by growing the universal understanding of viable, effective web 2.0 e-Health technologies and sharing successes and failures as an industry. There is no longer any choice about joining the e-Health revolution. It is becoming the rule, not the exception—and it’s gaining momentum everywhere.

We are quickly moving away from the traditional models of medicine and towards a patient-centric model with the intent to deliver more efficient care, whilst simultaneously improving patient outcomes. This is why tools have been introduced to help realize the promise of e-Health. A proven portal solution not only leverages, enhances, and augments existing IT investments, but also evolves information delivery platforms towards a more open, vendor-neutral, patient-centric environment.

OUR TANGLED, HIGHLY FRAGMENTED NETWORK
According to Frost & Sullivan, increasing integration is creating the need for a single point of contact to healthcare IT (HIT) systems, which in turn, is driving the e-Health market.

Today's health systems are tangled, highly fragmented networks that often waste a great number of resources by duplicating efforts, leaving unaccountable gaps, and failing to build on the strengths of our health professionals and clinical expertise. With an aging population, extended wait times, and chronic conditions reaching epidemic proportions, our healthcare system will not survive without radical change. e-Health, the application of web-based information technology to healthcare, can profoundly change the way the business of healthcare is conducted— making it safer, more affordable, and significantly more efficient.

However, transforming traditional modes of delivering care will require Health Care Organizations (HCO) to take advantage of the enormous potential offered by information technology in far more complex ways. Previously, e-Health was stalled by interoperability issues and a lack of workflow-driven, secure information exchange. Today however, progressive technology and innovative solutions are enabling unprecedented advancements.

The relatively brief history of Health Information Technology (HIT) has taught organizations the high costs of failure, which has caused Health Care Organizations to prudently proceed with guarded optimism. Although there is recognition of the benefits of e-Health, when combined with a market already crowded with HIT vendors attempting to help HCO’s realize a return on investment (ROI,) it becomes increasingly difficult to identify a vendor with a meaningful track record. As such, the majority of Health Care Organizations have been watching the progress of vanguard organizations before they commit their time and money.

Waiting to join the e-Health movement has its own disadvantages. Besides prolonging current inefficiencies, laggard organizations may miss an important window of opportunity, and the benefits of adopting e-Health strategies are too great to ignore. For HCO’s determined to take advantage of the current Infoway driven EHR environment, the next imperative action is to outline an appropriate technical platform for their e-Health strategy.

Fundamentally, organizations are seeking a platform that allows the seamless delivery of information across the continuum of healthcare and multiple locations. Fortunately, this objective can be met without cost prohibitive, universal replacement of existing HIT. Moving forward with a proven e-Health portal communications strategy can bind the information technology of disparate facilities and stakeholders into an interactive user community using advanced, but proven, web portal technologies.


WEB PORTALS: DEFINITION AND DESCRIPTION
From the user perspective, a web portal is technology that allows an individual or user community to gain convenient access to a broad range of information and services through their web browser.

Most HCO’s serve a variety of stakeholder communities, including providers, payers, patients, employees, and consumers. Each of these stakeholder communities benefits from a portal that is targeted specifically to meet their needs, aggregating information of value for them and allowing them to communicate freely with the host organization and each other.

For the hosting HCO, a portal is an integration tool that incorporates service and data management applications with workflows and business processes to present a unified, personalized, and streamlined gateway to their enterprise for its stakeholders. The HCO establishes a portal strategy to offer timely access to real-time information resulting in better customer service that is accessible from a single point of entry, regardless of which system generates the information or where the information resides.

While a provider portal, patient portal, employee portal, and a consumer portal each appear independent of the other, they are clearly interrelated. Since healthcare consumers may be patients, employees, or even providers, their needs will overlap. Therefore, each stakeholder may require access to the others’ data as well as additional common data sources.

A portal solution can serve to aggregate information stored in disparate, incompatible systems using a Service-Oriented Architecture (SOA). SOA describes a product architecture that allows tight integration with underlying applications, without requiring system interoperability. This also allows users to access software functions independent of the underlying platform and/or programming language.

It permits services to be rolled into larger applications that can be incorporated into portals, without locking the enterprise into a specific vendor. While the SOA concept has been around for quite some time, emerging standards-based integration technologies like Web services and XML have recently made it practical. The benefit for your healthcare organization is clear – a SOA enables eHealth while protecting the enterprise’s investment in legacy software. As organizations search for viable tactical path to leverage a Service-Oriented Architecture, many can use portal products as a first step.

EMPOWERING COMMUNICATION
By empowering patients, providing rapid, real-time data access, greater efficiency, and increased patient/physician collaboration, everyone benefits. Although eHealth applications serve the needs of many different stakeholders, there are four major stakeholder groups, which illustrate the value of this solution: patients, physicians, consumers and employees.



In spite of the differences in type and format of information and services each group requires, there is significant overlap and common desire for:
+ A more positive physician/patient experience between clinicians and patients
+ A more satisfying and effective clinical experience for patients and caregivers
+ A more transparent technology experience for all of the stake holders, but particularly the care givers and IT staff, easy to use and easy to maintain
+ Better IT cost control to make the CIO and CFO’s job of keeping costs down easier
+ More referrals and admits because of streamlining and efficiency improvements that expand a facility’s capacity
+ Brand advancement, fulfilling the goals of the marketing department and CEO of improving community awareness and market position
+ Better recruiting retention because of more effective use of staff time and skills, and easier access to human resources and other employee information
+ Improved operations for administrators and clinicians, building on existing skills and significantly reducing unnecessary mundane tasks.


However, while many vendors offer partial solutions, few offer a comprehensive portal communication solution.

Legacy HIS/CIS vendors offer applications targeting information access and management, and while they improve the physician/patient experience and provide operational efficiencies, the needs of the other stakeholders are not addressed.

Traditional web vendors, on the other hand, tend to focus on content management systems that excel at promoting an organization’s brand but leave the needs clinical and operations stakeholders unpreserved.

Somewhat more comprehensive, electronic medical record (EMR/EHR) vendors offer vital elements of the big picture solution, but cannot accomplish the complete transformation that browser-based systems promise.

e-HEALTH EVOLUTION: INTO THE FUTURE

The Gartner Group identified five levels of eHealth development using Portals, the elements that comprise them, and what it takes to move from one level to the next (see figure 1).

Health Care Organizations continue to significantly use portal products to build and deploy a variety of customer, citizen, partner and employee facing enterprise portals.

Portals have evolved through four generations of technology and are embarking on their fifth generation. In the beginning, eHealth bore relatively simple websites that provided new levels of information accessibility to healthcare consumers.

As the technology evolved to Level 2, searchable directories and more interactive features were added, providing dynamic new options for HCO marketing and administration departments. It was possible to promote classes and services, help people find reliable current health information and appropriate specialists, make human resources information readily available to employees, and collect and manage data using the Internet.

Since Generation 2, portals have leveraged service-oriented (SOA) capabilities. Generation 2 portals provided a rudimentary method of composite application assembly known as inter-portlet communication. Organizations can use inter-portlet communication to build composite applications by linking portlet’s related to a specific business process. This type of composite application is referred to as "on the glass" because the integration is at the presentation layer rather than deep in the business logic. This integration approach is effective for user-driven processes, and advanced enterprise portals use inter-portlet communication extensively.

Level 3 applications required a broader revolution within healthcare from paper to electronic medical records, which was reliant on emerging data standards and the willingness of HCO’s to empower their users with more control and access.

Generation 3 portals enabled systems to handle basic web services. These portal products could consume web services. The addition of workflow, which is a feature of most portal products, introduced a new way to orchestrate composite applications.

Over time, the experiences of the early adopters and results of pilot projects generated sufficient results to compel cautious HCO’s to pursue the promise of eHealth. With Level 3 adoption no longer stalled by technological limitations and the pervasive wait-and-see mentality, the next wave in eHealth is cresting.

Transformational web portals will offer business process management with workflow automation, alerts, and reminders, integration with patient records, medical device uploads and a host of other equally exciting advances. Together, unified data resources and user interaction will radically alter best-practices for patient care and healthcare efficiency.

As far back as February 2006, a survey of healthcare CIO’s ranked the area for which they would be most likely to offer increased functionality via their web presence. Offering patients the ability to schedule appointments through their website was most frequently identified, followed by utilizing a physician portal link and providing consumer health information. However, only a handful of the CIO’s report that their website is used to offer patients secures and authenticated access to medical records.

On the cutting edge of eHealth, vanguard organizations are evaluating the appropriate technical platform for Level 4 applications. With Generation 4, portals started to leverage advanced web services. This included the ability to provide web services, as well as consume them. It also supported the first web services standard for portlets, Web Services for Remote Portlets (WSRP), which enables one portal to consume a portlet from a different portal, using web services protocols. Thus, portal pages could include local and remote portlets, all supporting a single set of processes.

Generation 5 is emerging (see figure 1). Advanced features include support for business process management (BPM), service-oriented applications (SOBAs) and orchestration, critical features to support advanced composite applications. Business Process Execution Language will become the standard orchestration language for portal products and will extend beyond the capabilities of their current workflow features.

INFORMATION CONSOLIDATION
A portal strategy should be built on a stable, secure framework, offer single sign-on, single-patient/single-view access to all information using a coherent system of portals — simultaneously serving the needs of the wide variety of stakeholders.

A comprehensive portal communications solution should include broad-based applications through:
+ Flexible, easy-to-use web content management tools for rapid application development by both non-technical staff and programmers
+ Interoperability between incompatible legacy HIS systems, and real-time data access
+ Secure communication allowing patients and providers to communicate conveniently
+ Integrated third party applications for additional functionality.


Current, partial solutions can be made whole with interpretable portals through which all healthcare stakeholders will exchange information and engage the enterprise regardless of geographical location. Enterprise portals are intended to consolidate and streamline a vast array of information from multiple sources into a single screen. Portal technology enables different IT systems and software applications to communicate, to exchange data accurately, effectively, securely and consistently, and to use the information that has been exchanged, making the most out of your investments.

TECHNOLOGY THAT OVERCOMES: ELIMINATING ADOPTION ISSUES
With billions being invested in the migration from paper to electronic records, rapid ROI is a determining factor on the minds of executives and administrators concerned about their bottom line. Speedy, enterprise-wide adoption is critical for any eHealth initiative to realize the full benefits of their investment.

ELUSIVE RETURN ON INVESTMENT
Delays and patchwork systems negatively impact the organizations’ ROI. Still, adoption continues to be spotty, despite incentives. In part, the gradual adoption curve can be ascribed to common complaints of HIT; accompanying workflow and systems integrations require process changes that can be intimidating. Reengineering the way work is done presents challenges that extend far beyond use of the technology. Changing the enterprise culture and convincing busy professionals to adopt and learn new systems are essential but challenging components.

A study conducted back in 2001 found 121 administrators and physicians working for HCOs agreed that in order to remain competitive, providers must move toward interactive consumer web self-service capabilities (e.g. scheduling services, pre-registering for services and bill payment) and online Physician patient communication. However, the reluctance to proceed was tied predominantly to a lack of funding followed by a lack of commitment, fear, politics and other intangibles that must be overcome if an organization is to be able to achieve the advanced website functionality. These findings were reiterated in the 2006 HIMSS CIO Leadership survey, which found that for the sixth consecutive year, respondents identified a lack of adequate financial support for IT as the most significant barrier to a successful implementation of IT at their organization.

Certainly, ROI is an important factor in any healthcare IT acquisition. A prudent capital investment is measured by its contribution to the sustained financial strength of the organization. However, the use of capital assets for eHealth objectives cannot be measured solely on the balance sheet. When capital investment improves clinical outcomes, reduces preventable medical errors, and eliminates common sources of waste, the return is evident in healthier patients.

CLINICAL SYSTEM INTEROPERABILITY
The fragmentation of legacy HIT systems causes interoperability issues that can undermine an organization’s confidence in their ability to successfully implement a comprehensively integrated web solution. The data systems needed for an outpatient setting require a different level of sophistication than those that regulate admissions, discharges, and transfers within in a large hospital. Each system is defined by unique vendor standards, some of them decades old. These hurdles make a seamless, rapid data sharing format seem out of reach. However, integration can be tackled with the latest web technology.

Using a “virtual electronic health record” (EHR) model, any HCO can connect underlying systems rapidly and cost effectively to deliver views of clinical information through secure, single sign-on, web-browser technology. The virtual EMR is dependent on a decentralized, federated data model. Using this architecture allows HCOs to leverage legacy HIS/CIS investments, avoiding the ongoing maintenance of an expensive Central Data Repository (CDR).

A federated data model eliminates system integration hassles and overcomes patient identification challenges with master patient indexing logarithms. It seamlessly integrates disparate clinical and census data, transforming fragmented data into a clean and concise dashboard of information.

For example, a Clinical Portal can present admitting, attending, and referring Physicians with real-time access to all of their patients’ clinical information across multiple sites and when combined with systems such as computerized physician order entry (CPOE), provides the ability to input patient order entry and review via a web-browser. Additionally, online continuing medical education (CME), calendars, scheduling, clinical trial information, grand rounds, physician newsletters, and other relevant clinical content may all be presented in a customizable view for each user.

PHYSICIAN ACCEPTANCE
The biggest concern for busy Physicians is the time and energy required to transfer data and learn new systems. They are understandably reluctant to spend time away from patient-facing activities to address administrative business. To reduce training time, leading eHealth solution providers devote considerable resources to researching and designing intuitive applications that build on existing user experiences best practices.

Additionally, a federated data-model eliminates the need for Clinicians to learn underlying applications for checking labs or reviewing films, for example, as the GUI they use does not require any understanding of the host IT system, only to view the relevant clinical data that resides on it.

PATIENT IDENTIFICATION, PRIVACY AND HIPAA COMPLIANCE
Understandably, HCOs, Physicians and Clinicians are sensitive to their responsibility to protect confidential patient information and may see rapid, real-time online access to vital information as a threat to privacy. Understandably adequate security measures and an architectural design must be engineered to allow an organization to implement eHealth applications with demonstrable compliance with regulations and respect for the patients’ rights. Todays web 2.0 eHealth technologies including authentication protocols and CAPTCHA, encryption of secure messages, automatic audit trails of information access, controlled workflow and secure servers guard patient information from unauthorized access.

FOLLOW THE LEADERS
e-Health is certainly no longer in its infancy, yet sustained concerns about implementing new technology is understandable. It’s a real challenge for most organizations to create a tactical plan to ensure that their web capabilities support current corporate objectives.

It is far more difficult for HCOs to devise a long term plan that serves the evolving needs of the organization, adapts to technological advances, and meets new societal demands. The pressure to deliver on high-priced projects adds gravity to the matter. The initial expenses are just a small piece of the overall financial commitment an HCO makes in the transition to eHealth, and the failure rate for EHR implementations is estimated at 30 to 50 percent. False starts and implementation time-line overruns are too costly for most HCO's to risk.

To overcome these barriers, part of doing it right the first time requires research to learn from organizations that have been successful in their own eHealth initiatives. Over the past decade, a wide variety of HCOs have achieved eHealth success, from early-adopting visionaries constantly striving for better ways to engage their stakeholders, to more cautious pragmatists waiting for proven solutions to their online needs.

COST AND TRAINING
In the 2006 HIMSS CIO Survey, lack of staffing resources was identified as the second most common barrier to IT adoption. Time and resource efficiencies enabled by eHealth have been demonstrated to pay for themselves in as little as a year. Fewer chart pulls and phone calls, speedier access to accurate information, lower record maintenance, and staffing costs, and revenue enhancements together create a synergy of efficiency—that more than compensates for the up-front investments.

For example, reducing the need for just one administrator/ trainer can save significant financial resources. One estimate based on a 40 hour work week over 50 weeks, and an average annual salary of $50,000, suggests that reducing one full time trainer can yield a savings of $61,000 USD a year. The architecture and design of today’s eHealth products are focused on allowing nontechnical users the maximum flexibility to manage their websites and portals. Additionally, intuitive design reduces the need for training and results in an immediate cost saving.

COMPETITIVE HOSPITALS: TRANSFORMING DELIVERY PLATFORMS
To remain competitive hospitals will soon have no real choice but to further transform their delivery platform. Organizations unable or unwilling to keep up are in danger of losing their competitive edge. The trick is to survive the transformation without multi-restarts, multi-level failures and multi-millions wasted.

However, the potential to succeed has never been clearer. A proven, cost effective model is available that delivers rapid, convenient access to any and all historical patient medical information from anywhere, regardless of when and where the care was delivered. Such a system is easily deployed, satisfies the need for cost effectiveness (ROI), dramatically increases productivity, efficiency, and makes the best use of existing resources. Ultimately, such a platform creates a healthcare environment that provides both patients and providers with improved outcomes and higher satisfaction.

Portals will allow transactions (and information) to flow rapidly and seamlessly over the web, but first the groundwork must be laid. Thankfully, proven technology exists to help healthcare organizations transition smoothly from one level of eHealth to the next at a fraction of the time and cost of competing models. Ultimately, confidence in proven solutions will embolden the willingness of responsible managers to move forward with and capitalize upon the promise of e-Health.

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Thursday, December 04, 2008

How Often Do U.S. Physicians Go Online for Clinical Information?


Fifty-eight percent of U.S. physicians surveyed said they go online for clinical information at least two times per day, according to a new Epocrates survey.

Fifteen percent of physicians reported going online for clinical information once per day, while 22% reported going online for clinical information several times a week. Three percent of physicians surveyed said they go online for clinical data weekly, while 2% said they go online for clinical information monthly.

More than three out of four respondents said they go online for clinical information more often now than they did a year ago, according to the survey.

Forty-eight percent of physician respondents said they go online for clinical information most frequently during patient consultations, compared with 37% who said they most frequently look up clinical information between patient visits. Ten percent of doctors said they go online for clinical information after work, while 3% said they find clinical information online during their lunch breaks and 2% said they go online for clinical data before work.

Results are based on a survey of 501 physicians who have used the Epocrates Online product at least three times and have logged on within the past 60 days.

Source: Epocrates, "Epocrates Online Physician User Survey"
Read original article.

Eventually, Information Technology (IT) May Make Practice of Medicine More Satisfying

Almost every plan to improve health care -- from members of Congress, insurers, employers and President-elect Barack Obama -- contends that new IT, including electronic health records, electronic prescribing and telemedicine, will save time and money.

But will health Information Technology (IT) make practicing medicine more satisfying?

Eventually, but it's going to take a while, and it won't be easy or inexpensive, according to a representative of the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society and the president of The Physicians' Foundation, which recently released a national survey measuring doctors' opinions about the profession.

The Physicians' Foundation survey indicates widespread frustration among primary care physicians. They feel overworked and nearly half of them plan to cut back on the number of patients they see or quit medicine entirely, according to the survey.

Neither John Maese, chair of the HIMSS Ambulatory Care Steering Committee and president of Quality Physician Services in Brooklyn, N.Y., nor Lou Goodman, president of The Physicians' Foundation, see health IT as a panacea for all that ails the medical profession, but both agree it can be a valuable tool.

Goodman, however, is worried there soon may not be enough primary care physicians, regardless of new technology.

"Going into this project we generally knew about the shortage of physicians," Goodman said, adding, "What we didn't know is how much worse it could get over the next few years. The bottom line is that the person you've known as your family doctor could be getting ready to disappear -- and there might not be a replacement."

Initial Investment of Time and Money
Maese said that health IT can help make the practice of medicine more rewarding but that it takes an initial investment of time and money.

"Initially, technology slows you down," Maese said, adding, "So in the face of declining reimbursement that requires you to see more patients per hour, it can be very frustrating to start up with technology."

Maese said, "Younger physicians who have grown up with a computer find it easier to transition to technology." He added, "Older physicians who do not have that experience initially have to carve out time to learn basic computer skills and then the new software."

In its survey, mailed to 270,000 primary care doctors and 50,000 specialists, The Physicians' Foundation asked, "Have you already implemented an electronic health record?" Among the almost 12,000 responses, 72% answered "no" and 28% answered "yes."

"Time, money, personnel and expertise are the major barriers to widespread adoption of technology in medical practice," Goodman said.

Of those who said they had not moved to EHRs, 77% cited lack of money, 69% cited lack of expertise or other resources and 61% cited lack of time.

Although the survey did not specifically address physicians' opinions of health IT, Goodman said his sense is that most physicians look forward to the advancement it represents.

"I think many physicians are very interested in adopting new technology and many have already taken the next step," Goodman said.

"There is great interest and continued excitement over the potential improvements technology holds. [Health IT] is clearly on the front burner in the early discussions in the Obama cabinet as part of its proposed health system reform efforts," Goodman noted.

The Physicians' Foundation was founded in 2003 as part of a settlement in an anti-racketeering lawsuit involving insurers, physicians and medical societies. The foundation conducts research and acts as an advocate for physicians and physicians groups.

More Seed Money Needed
Maese and Goodman said increasing payments to help offset investment costs for technology would help make technology spread more rapidly.
"We believe that the large initial investment in technology without the concomitant adjustment in payment rates makes it very difficult for private practice to install an [EHR]," Goodman said, adding, "Even large group practices have seen challenges with questions of interoperability and the significant outlays of time and money required to get a system up and running."

Maese agrees. "There needs to be increased financial support for the EMR, the initial purchase and the ongoing maintenance of the EMR," Maese said, adding, "Currently, small practices, where most health care is delivered, do not have the economic ability to purchase the hardware, the software as well as the additional expense of electrical wiring upgrades and high speed Internet access to make an [EHR] work."

Five Ways Information Technology (IT) Can Help
Once the initial learning curve is negotiated and hardware and software are in place and working, Maese lists the following five ways new technology can make a physician's life more satisfying:

• "The computer may not save them time but there is a feeling that there is a higher quality of care rendered and better patient safety. This is very satisfying to the physician."

• "Reduction of the hassle factor. You are able to deal with insurance or formulary issues at the point of care so you do not have to go back after the patient has left the office and redo the request for a medication or a service."

• "Improved time management or flexible time management. Electronic medical records that can be accessed from home gives the physician more flexibility. The physician can attend meetings and events without having to go back to the office to complete medical records or carry charts back and forth to have them completed."

• "Better access to care for patients in an emergency. Electronic records can be accessed from anywhere."

• "More family time. Once the physician has completed seeing all the patients, the physician can go home, see the family and complete chart documentation remotely. In addition, follow-up care, checking diagnostic tests and X-rays can be done at home, which again allows the physician flexibility to spend more time with the family, which helps increase overall lifestyle satisfaction."

by George Lauer, iHealthBeat Features Editor
Read Original Article.

Friday, October 24, 2008

The Modern Face of Healthcare: The Wired Patient


Occasionally in our lives there is an alignment of powerful forces that cause a technology, a theory, or a new product to resonate with the broadest of audiences. One topic that is consistently debated and the highest priority on the agenda of citizens, public servants, and nations at large is healthcare ---and in particular how the advent of the internet and communication technologies is changing the way we deliver care.

The aim of Information and Communication Technologies (ICT) for Health (also known as eHealth) is to significantly improve the quality, access and efficacy of healthcare. ICT for Health describes the application of information and communication technologies across the whole range of functions that affect the health sector. Whether attempting to heighten prevention, detection, integration, or extend patients self-management tools---today’s healthcare delivery paradigm is clearly shifting to focus on connecting individuals rather than infrastructure. Moreover, today’s savvy consumers are demanding better health services and a more personalized service delivery model that places them at the centre of new models of connectivity for improved communication and collaboration.

Harris Interactive, on behalf of The Commonwealth Fund Commission, recently surveyed a random sample of 1,004 U.S. adults (age 18 and older) to determine their experiences and perspectives on the organization of the US health care system and ways to improve patient care. Eight of 10 respondents agreed that the health system needs either fundamental change or complete rebuilding—citing difficulties accessing care, poor coordination of services, and administrative hassles. In addition, the survey found that one of three adults has experienced inefficient or unnecessary care in the past two years. Granted this was not a Canadian study, however, many of the systemic issues seen south of the border are equally relevant here in Canada.

What is consistent in both countries is that Patients are increasingly seeking services that empower them to take an active role in managing their own health. Empowering patients to take more control over their health extends to those actions individuals and take for themselves, their children, families and others to stay fit and maintain good physical and mental health; meet social and psychological needs; prevent illness or accidents; care for minor ailments and long-term conditions; and maintain health and well being after an acute illness or discharge from hospital.

Patient self-care is driven by things like the increased adoption of online services via broadband and mobile devices; the enhanced ability to connect with individuals in other social networks; the continuing ease in submitting content online; and the growing participation of users with similar interests in online communities. What is clear is that people are going online today to share personal health experiences and learn from others with similar experiences or conditions. This shift promises to evolve traditional models of medicine toward a patient-centric model and aims to effectively bridge the gap between caregivers and patients – before, during, and after the hospital stay. The good news is that the value proposition is mutually advantageous, as both Patients and Healthcare delivery organizations reap the benefits of self-care initiatives.

Patient Collaboration
There is a notable growth in patient collaboration in determining support and direction. And this will only increase as the tools that enable and track insight and participation continue to improve.

When patients participate directly in determining how they are engaged, and are provided personalized content in their preferred channel, Healthcare delivery organizations are simultaneously extended the ability to capture and share information, understand their stakeholder’s unique needs, and improve the overall patient experience.

Information and communication technologies (ICT) offer numerous potential benefits in terms of improvements for patients, health and elderly care professionals and decision-makers. Citizens, patients and relatives must have quick, trouble-free access to quality-assured information on health care provision and health concerns, as well as personal data on their own care, treatment and health status. They must also be able to contact care services via the internet for assistance, advice or help with self-treatment.

What is absolutely clear is that Information and communication technologies are changing health care delivery and are at the core of effective, responsive health systems. These technologies are key to connecting people, information and research to improve health in countries, and ultimately, healthcare organizations extending their patients participatory tools in their own care path will have a much deeper understanding of their patients needs, and will have gone significantly farther towards building and maintaining patient trust and confidence.

Today, it’s truly all about the Patient and one-to-one engagement is the new competitive advantage.

Thursday, October 09, 2008

Thought Leader Series | "Patient Portals"


by Peter Kuhn | October 08, 2008

According to the Deloitte 2008 Survey of Health Care Consumers, over 70 percent of consumers want their hospital to provide online access to an integrated view of their medical information, including test results, doctor visits and hospital stays. Yet the percentage of hospitals that have deployed a true patient portal is still in the single digits.

Although it may appear that the healthcare industry has been devoid of motivation for the past 10 years, hospitals have been investing heavily in technology such as hospital information systems, laboratory systems, picture archiving computer systems and other solutions that enable electronic connectivity for clinicians within the organizations. These investments are already beginning to show results in terms of productivity and cost savings.

However, this is just the start of the process of patient data integration. Even though some hospitals have successfully linked major disparate systems within the hospital, few have fully integrated their environments, such as pharmacy interaction for closed loop medication reconciliation and seamless access to physician practice-based electronic medical records (EMR), the source of the majority of a patient’s encounter history.

Connecting to the multitude of EMRs can be a real challenge for hospitals. For example, if there are 1,000 referring doctors in a given area, and approximately 300 different EMR solutions in the industry (depending on who you ask), it is reasonable to assume that a hospital might need to interface with 15 distinct EMRs within just one community. Adding to the complexity is the fact that the average patient sees three to five different providers. This is all compounded by the relative newness of system and interoperability standards, which has erected significant speed bumps for risk-averse hospital systems.

Next Up ... Patients
Once hospitals link their inpatient hospital systems with outpatient (physician) EMR systems (still a dream for many healthcare systems today), the next step is to extend the network to include patients. Several factors motivate hospitals to accelerate this step. First, the expanding adoption of high-deductible insurance plans by employers is forcing fiscal and care decision making upon consumers. With this increased level of responsibility, consumers are demanding greater transparency in costs and improved value of the care delivered by providers. This is well supported by industry statistics: For example, the Deloitte 2008 Survey of Health Care Consumers shows that 64 percent of consumers wish to use Web sites to research the quality of hospital care, 62 percent wish to verify the prices of hospital services and 59 percent wish to view information about health conditions and treatments.

Consumers who are often drafted into the consumer-directed healthcare model through their employers have become empowered patients that expect value for their time and money. As indicated in the Deloitte study, 68 percent are interested in same-day appointments and 60 percent want online appointment scheduling — and they are willing to pay for the convenience. In fact, one in four consumers would pay extra for online access to these integrated services and patient information.

As insurer reimbursements continue their downward spiral, this new source of incremental revenue is a strong motivation for providers, as is the competitive advantage that it supplies in the increasingly crowded marketplace. Additionally, hospitals are beginning to realize that the more extensive the integration of actionable patient information and online access, the greater return on investment they experience. Large hospital systems in cities such as Philadelphia, Chicago, Seattle, Detroit and the Washington/Baltimore region are making some of the greatest strides in this area.

Disruptive Technology?
An interesting development occurred with the entrance of Microsoft and Google into the healthcare arena. Their ubiquitous consumer outreach has introduced the masses to the concept of medical information access at a rate and scope not achievable by a healthcare organization without millions of additional dollars spent in patient communications. Now, EMRs and personal health records are some of the hottest concepts within consumer media, compelling patients to approach their physicians and hospitals to ask for the ability to view and access their medical information and healthcare services. Consumers now know that these services exist — and they want them.

This situation is similar to the shake-up that occurred in the travel industry, triggered by the consumer-focused, online services provided by Expedia and similar travel portals. Traditional agencies had to adapt and offer comprehensive online services or be left behind. Google and Microsoft have shaken the healthcare tree, and it’s time to evolve or fall to the ground.

But even those two corporate behemoths are not supplying all of the legs of the patient data stool. They are offering free medical record storage, but with limited integration to all the disparate sources of medical data. Their solutions provide limited benefits related to enhanced clinical workflow and productivity. But they do point the industry to that which it lacks — access combined with actionable data.

Unfortunately, some hospital organizations may pause once they provide basic access to data, without providing a means to act upon that data. Patients wish to see their test results, but then they need to schedule a follow-up appointment, ask questions and request prescription refills. This is the actionable functionality that is key to achieving the maximum workflow, quality and safety benefits with these integrated systems.

Significant Savings
We have seen a 3-to-1 variance when comparing the use of phone-based services to online services. On average, the provider’s staff spends three minutes on the phone scheduling an appointment; yet that same action would take a patient one minute to accomplish via a patient portal, without requiring assistance from hospital personnel. Multiplied across patients, the time savings for both parties is substantial. Additionally, the patient has the convenience of scheduling an appointment whenever they have time, whether it is at 2 a.m. on a weeknight or at 10 a.m. on a Sunday. No wait, no hassle and all the benefits of online services — e-mail reminders, online calendars and more.

For clinicians and staff, these online requests can be responded to during non-peak times so that hands-on patient care can be their first priority, contributing to improved patient outcomes and safety. Furthermore, the streamlined workflow enabled by the portal enhances all phases of the continuum of care.

Word of Mouth Goes Viral
Lastly, the satisfaction delivered to the patients, as well as to the clinicians, should not be underestimated. Just like the old-fashioned word of mouth, happy patients will send links to helpful information found on patient portals to their friends, relatives and colleagues. Some portals even enable patients to provide family members with authorized access to their private medical information. Otherwise known as viral marketing, by encouraging patients to forward information about the given hospital’s impressive patient portal services, hospitals have tapped into one of the most powerful and cost-effective marketing methods for attracting future patients.

Of course, any change will face some resistance. Similar to traditionalists that prefer to walk inside the bank and stand in line to deposit their checks, there will be some patients that are not immediately comfortable with online interactions. However, soon we will see corner store kiosks where we can view and access our medical records, and communicate with physicians and office staff. It’s already started.

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Peter Kuhn is President of MEDSEEK, a provider of enterprise eHealth solutions.

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Wednesday, September 17, 2008

PHR: WILL CONSUMERS REALLY HAVE A CHOICE? THE NEW ENTRANTS INTO THE PERSONAL HEALTH RECORDS (PHR) MARKET MAY PROVIDE COMPETITION.

Sept. 8, 2008 | By Barbara A. Cox and Marysol Imler

Since 2004, the US has been energized in trying to develop and provide personal health records (PHR's) for all consumers. During the last 4 years, many models have emerged. Several of the models have failed for a variety of reasons, including lack of a sustainable funding model. In addition, many of the interoperable health record models have not included the involvement of the individual consumer -- the person for whom these models are intended to be used by.

Over the last year, a new type of solution provider entered the PHR market. Different than the typical vendor that has been known to service the health industry, these solution providers are vendors known for addressing the consumer market. The new entrants (Google Health, Microsoft HealthVault and Revolution Health), may provide the type of competition and consumer controlled model that will help the industry evolve at a more rapid pace than what has been happening to date. With these new vendors, will control be transferred from the care provider to the consumer as it should be if health care is going to transform?

WINDS OF CHANGE
Are these products bringing about a refreshing change to the industry? While these products are much easier to use and implement than the traditional federated or scattered model of clinical data integration that has consumed the nation over the last 4 years, they appear to be in the first generation of product releases. Hopefully, the industry will see better things to come.

Microsoft, Google and Revolution Health are intended to support the consumerism wave in giving the individual a choice about the products they choose to use and the groups or people that can view their information. For an individual to receive full value for these products, they must have interoperability with that person's care providers' clinical systems. Unfortunately, the consumer is still limited by whether or not their own personal physician groups choose to participate with these products. Physicians and hospitals around the country are making choices on which platform to align with, and it is doubtful that an organization will choose to participate with multiple platforms.

Until the platforms achieve interoperability, a consumer will not truly have choice in the matter of determining which set of products they want to use. For instance, if your physician is associated with the Cleveland Clinic, you can receive the full value of having your data transferred into Google and populated with other services participating with Google, or you can choose to populate the data manually. Then, the individual is limited by the functionality provided by Google. Should you want to use a service that is associated with Microsoft HealthVault, you will be out of luck unless you choose to manually load the data yourself, which presents another set of challenges with providers regarding the accuracy of the data.

HOW ARE THE PHR PRODUCTS DIFFERENT?
Microsoft HealthVault is truly a platform. With this solution, business partners provide the application functionality. HealthVault is the keeper of the consumer demographics information and personal profiles to establish security and user identity. The consumer then chooses to use or buy services from a number of different vendors who provide value to the individual.

Google Health has a light-weight PHR embedded with its platform. The platform also has personal demographics and a personal profile for security and personal identity. While Google also has business partners in which an individual can choose to use, there is a limited supply of PHR solutions available.

Revolution Health is a robust PHR with a lot of educational content to add value for the individual. It is positioned as a tool to help employers and their employees. However, when conducting research, it was difficult to view the data integration possibilities with providers due to technical difficulties on the Web site.

CONSUMERS AND CHOICE
What will have to happen for consumers to have choice? The vendors and the care providers must evolve to support a consumer controlled environment. Consumers need to communicate to their care providers about the tools they want to use. The care providers will set up the link in their system and automatically send the clinical, administrative and financial data to the designated choice. For a seamless transmission of data to occur in a cost effective manner, the data transmission will need to follow strict standards that every vendor will adopt. Today's standards are left to the interpretation of the organizations interacting.

When the industry agrees to adopt a consumer control approach, then consumers will have choice. Until that time, the care providers are still in the driver seat, even with the new emerging consumer platforms that Microsoft HealthVault, Google Health and Revolution Health provide.

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Read original article.
Barbara A. Cox is Senior Principal, Noblis Center for Health Innovation. Marysol Imler is a Consultant for Noblis Center for Health Innovation.

Wednesday, August 13, 2008

PROVIDER E-HEALTH PORTAL ALLOWS REGIONAL HOSPITALS TO SHARE DATA


In 2005, the Ontario government decided to transfer the operation of Georgetown Hospital from William Osler Health Centre to Halton Healthcare Services. During the transition, historical clinical data was left on the Osler system, and after the transfer, many of the physicians remained at Georgetown and still provided service to Osler. In order to provide clinicians with access to patient data from both organizations, a “provider portal” was deemed the best approach to meet the clinical data sharing needs of physicians and clinicians.

The IT staff from Halton and Osler worked together to identify available vendor solutions, and during the request for proposals process, three other hospitals — Credit Valley Hospital, Trillium Health Centre and Headwaters Health Care — became involved in the evaluation because it was felt they might join the network later. In 2006, Credit Valley acquired a licence for the provider portal; Trillium and Headwaters followed in 2008.

In a presentation at the eHealth Summit, Dan Germain, vice-president, CFO and CIO at Credit Valley, explained how the Rapid Electronic Access to Clinical Health Information (REACH) system was deployed. The REACH provider portal (provided by Medseek) is a web-based Portal solution that consolidates clinical patient data from disparate vendor systems (in real-time) into a unified, patient-centric view regardless of site location.

Currently, the REACH portal allows viewing of allergies and alerts, laboratory results, pharmacy medications, pathology reports, radiology images and reports, ECG tracings, clinical orders, clinical documentation, scanned paper records, rounding reports, and other clinical data. It’s developed on a federated data model, where data is stored at each entity. The REACH server consolidates the clinical data in real time, presenting it to the user in a web browser in milliseconds. It's similar to a Health Information Access Layer (HIAL.)

The REACH portal also employs an Enterprise Master Patient Index (EMPI.) However, once access is granted to use the Ontario EMPI, REACH will interface to that application. The Credit Valley Hospital's IT team was impressed by the speed with which this application was deployed, Germain said. Implementation was accomplished over a few months, and in the words of users, testing was similar to a systems upgrade. Since the application is very intuitive, users required little if any training.

Before deployment at CVH, a privacy impact assessment was performed. The only significant recommendation was to mandate the use of a pass-code keyfob for remote access via the Internet. Since patient-specific data is only stored once, responsibility for data security and integrity remains with each host hospital.

By the spring of this year, William Osler, Halton and Credit Valley were using the provider portal extensively. Every month, hundreds of physicians and clinicians log onto REACH, one-third of whom are users looking at their patients that have been seen at other facilities. There are now over 9,000 views per month. As well as integrating into the Ontario HIAL and EMPI, Germain said future plans for this initiative include additional clinical content such as operating room systems and realtime physiological wave-form monitoring. REACH is also to extend a Patient Portal providing patient's range of other self-care services directly accessible online.

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Canadian electronic health record (EHR) projects quadruple in four years


By Richard Pizzi, Associate Editor 08/12/08

Canada's electronic health record projects increased by 12 percent last year and have quadrupled since 2004, according to Richard Alvarez, president and CEO of Canada Health Infoway.

"Canadians want their medical information available electronically to the clinicians who care for them and that's starting to happen in communities across Canada," said Alvarez.

“Collaboration among governments is at an all-time high and with continued federal funding, we are well on our way to providing every Canadian with an electronic health record by 2016."
Canada Health Infoway is an independent, not-for-profit organization funded by the Canadian government. It jointly invests with every province and territory to accelerate the development and adoption of EHR projects in Canada.

Infoway approved $311.5 million in new EHR investments in 2007-08, bringing the total cumulative value of its investments to $1.457 billion, or 89 percent of Infoway's $1.6 billion in capitalization by the Canadian government. The investment brings the total number of projects underway to 254, representing a four-fold increase from the 53 projects that were underway in 2004.

"The electronic health record projects the government of Canada is investing in are coming alive (and) bringing tangible results," said Tony Clement, Canada's federal minister of health.

Clement noted, for example, that in Nova Scotia, a shared diagnostic imaging program provides digital images of X-rays, MRIs, CT scans and ultrasounds to authorized healthcare providers. He said patients in Canada's remote northern communities are connected with healthcare professionals in urban centers through telehealth, and electronic medical records are generating results in the face of growing clinician shortages and administrative demands.

Alvarez said he's seeing steady progress in all Infoway-funded electronic health record programs including registries, diagnostic imaging and laboratory and drug programs. He said Infoway would continue to target investments in "replicable solutions that support health system transformation, such as telehealth and public health surveillance."

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Friday, August 01, 2008

Healthcare and Web 2.0


Healthcare systems are undergoing a series of complex transformations. Consumers are demanding better services and information that enables provider transparency and a more personalized service delivery model. This shift in healthcare has already begun, whether or not healthcare delivery organizations are ready to respond or not. We are quickly moving away from the traditional models of medicine and towards a patient-centric model with the intent to deliver more efficient care, whilst simultaneously improving patient outcomes.

The advent of new web 2.0 eHealth technologies is serving as a powerful catalyst and today’s savvy consumers (patients) are demanding that the often slow-moving healthcare industry act in response to their evolving needs.

The increasing expectations of consumers is a clear reflection of wider societal changes that have been evolving for a number of years, however, the pace of these trends has recently accelerated. In particular, the ability to articulate and communicate (1:1) individual preferences and demands has been made far easier with advancing web technologies. Such tools, for example, have enabled even novice internet users to create and edit content online. It’s clear; today’s Patients are becoming better informed and more web savvy; increasingly seeking services that allow them to take an active role in managing their health.

Patient Empowerment
Empowering patients to take more control over their health extends to those actions individuals and take for themselves, their children, their families and others to stay fit and maintain good physical and mental health; meet social and psychological needs; prevent illness or accidents; care for minor ailments and long-term conditions; and maintain health and well being after an acute illness or discharge from hospital. This “Self-care” is also one of the key building blocks for patient-centric healthcare delivery, and research shows that supporting self-care improves health outcomes, increases patient satisfaction, and reduces the increasing administrative burden.

This (r)evolution is also driven by things like the increased adoption of online services via broadband and mobile devices; the enhanced ability to connect with individuals in other social networks; the continuing ease in submitting content online; and the growing participation of users with similar interests in online communities. People are flocking to online communities to share personal health experiences as well as learn from others with similar experiences or conditions. Patient feedback on treatments and providers for example, has begun to develop into an online system that generates transparency in the health system. Today’s web-savvy patients are using web tools to take responsibility for managing their own health status and care-path rather than always relying on experts or the 'doctor knows best' assumption. This self-service (self-care) trend effectively bridges the gap between caregivers and patients – before, during, and after the hospital stay and has far-reaching implications.

Heightened Transparency and Accountability
One of the central components of today's healthcare delivery (and public health at large) is information. The use of eHealth (ICT) technologies related to gathering and retrieving patient data is already important and will only become more important in the future.

Millions of dollars are spent each year in Canada alone on patients with chronic diseases who do not receive the recommended care designed to keep their conditions under control. New web 2.0 consumer tools and service models for chronic conditions are taking shape and the trend toward measurement of clinical outcomes is increasing and irreversible. As both regulatory agencies and consumers insist today on measuring the quality of care across a wide variety of clinical areas, “best-practice” treatment models emerge. This follows the growing awareness that quality equals affordability and that the best way to control long-term costs is to provide higher quality care today.

The Electronic Health Record (EHR)
Technology can be intimidating, however Practitioners recognize today that the use of a comprehensive, transferrable EHR promises to protect patients from preventable errors such as medication mistakes, surgical complications, and much more. It’s proven that extending care delivery stakeholders access to timely, evidence-based and expert information, enables more efficient and better-informed decisions. A recent Advertising campaign by Rexall Drugs in Canada identifies that as many as 200,000 Canadians are hospitalized annually from negative interactions with medications. Moreover, a (US-based) 2008 New England Journal of Medicine survey found that “82 percent of those using such electronic records said they improved the quality of clinical decisions, 86 percent said they helped in avoiding medication errors, and 85 percent said they improved the delivery of preventative care.”

So, whether the goal is to heighten prevention, detection, integration, or extend patients self-management---our healthcare delivery paradigm is clearly shifting to focus on connecting individuals rather than infrastructure---effectively putting patients (and clinicians) at the centre of new models of connectivity for improved communication and collaboration.

May the dreams of our past be the reality of our future.

Wednesday, July 02, 2008

Using “Virtual Reasoning” to redefine Healthcare


by Dr. Marlene Beggelman

The Internet is redefining the health care industry. Major transformations can be expected because Internet-based technology will deliver certain health care services more effectively and at lower costs. In the near future, much of the information that is currently imparted to consumers by clinicians will be delivered through and by web-based technology. If the web-based tools that deliver this information mature to the point of becoming reimbursable, beyond their current usefulness as value add-ons, the health care industry could experience a dramatic shift.

Tools
Early stage Health 1.0 information has predominantly been available in the form of an “e-pamphlet” with a one-size-fits-all approach. Subsequent generations of Health 2.0 tools are interactive and deliver personalized, and therefore more valuable information that is geared specifically to the user’s input. With the advent of advanced tools, consumers are no longer limited to being passive recipients of pamphlet-style information; in these milieus they interact with each other or with sophisticated software that analyzes cases on an individualized basis. Advanced tools are being used by Internet entities as bait both to drive traffic and to capture detailed user profiling data.

Several categories of interactive Health 2.0 tools are available, including advanced search engines that deliver more accurate results; social media sites in which individuals hone their medical knowledge through interactions with each other; and finally, expert systems - sophisticated software programs that analyze a consumer’s profile and, based on the analysis, pinpoint the most relevant educational information necessary to support the consumer’s health care decisions. Expert system tools basically simulate human reasoning.

Virtual Reasoning – a New Model
Speculation about where Internet health care might be taking us can be approached, in part, as a projection of the next generation of the most advanced web-based health care tools. If what consumers and payers want from health care is an acceptable cost-quality trade off, assurance that care is appropriate for the situation, that the diagnosis is correct, and that errors of commission and omission are kept to a minimum, web-based tools need to move beyond simple information retrieval to the level of analytic services – expert systems that are virtually capable of reasoning, rather than only presenting facts.

If Health 2.0 products bring you cholesterol guidelines, then virtual reasoning tools, in counter-point, should calculate your LDL (bad cholesterol) goal based on your level of risk for heart disease and assess whether or not you are taking the right medicine. If Health 2.0 delivers personalized information, virtual reasoning systems offer the equivalent of a virtual second opinion.

As virtual reasoning tools reach a greater level of maturity, they will represent cost-effective alternatives to certain health care services traditionally performed face-to-face by health care professionals. At some point, they will cease to function merely as value add-ons and become reimbursable, revenue-realizing businesses in their own right, augmenting some of the educational and analytic services now in the purview of health care providers.

The logical end-point of expert system and decision-support adoption will be a new reimbursable segment of the service industry in which lower cost services are rendered through technology solutions. When physicians are reimbursed to use expert system technology, they will have sufficient incentive to adopt electronic medical records (EMR/EHR) as well.

For tools to replace certain traditional face-to-face services they have to be integrated into the clinician’s normal workflow and electronic medical records systems. EMR/EHR companies will first incorporate expert system tools for much the same reasons as the PHR initiatives do – for the value-added benefits they offer to the customer base. In future models, though, fully integrated tools will sit “under the hood” of an EMR/EHR, continually combing the medical record data for errors and oversights as new data is entered. They will compare treatment to evidence-based recommendations, follow response to treatment over time, generate outcomes data, and generally function as an automated quality assurance system.

Physician Adoption
Physicians will ultimately be reimbursed for the time they spend administering care through the medium of information technology. Early pilots will likely be initiated by payers (large, self-insured employers) who believe that the potential for improved, more appropriate care will result in significant cost-savings. These technology adjuncts will free health care professional from the mundane functions of data gathering, recording, and administering; they will enable physicians to focus on the more rewarding cognitive aspects of medical practice. With more free time, physicians can move squarely into a consultancy role in which they help their patients assimilate and analyze increasingly complex choices.

Significant activity around tool adoption is already underway: Microsoft, Google and other Internet companies have been acquiring advanced search and expert system tools; programs in which web-based service delivery is reimbursed are being piloted; and Google Health has taken the first steps to make a large number of tools available on their platform. How quickly the process eventually unfolds depends on a number of factors that mostly revolve around any upcoming changes in health care financing and in the political climate. No matter how health care financing is structured, however, the need for tools that enhance health care quality and efficiency still applies.

Dr. Marlene Beggelman is the CEO of Enhanced Medical Decisions, which is the company behind DoubleCheckMD.com.

Monday, May 26, 2008

Google Health opens, sparks privacy woes


After a year and half of development, Google's online filing cabinet for personal medical records is open to the public, giving users instant electronic access to their health histories, while reigniting privacy concerns.

Called Google Health, the service lets users link information from a handful of pharmacies and care providers, with plans to add many more. The Internet search giant is the latest entrant in the growing field of companies offering personal health records on the Web. Their ranks range from longtime online health services such as WebMD to the software powerhouse Microsoft to start-ups such as Revolution Health.

The companies all hope to capitalize on the trend of consumers increasingly seeking health information online, and the potential of Internet tools to help them manage their own health care and medical spending.

Google enters the field of personal health records with a leading online brand, deep pockets and a wealth of technical skills. In a two-month trial this year, the Cleveland Clinic found that its patients were eager to use the Google health records. Google Health differentiates itself from the pack through its user interface and features such as the public availability of its application program interface, or API, said Marissa Mayer, the Google executive overseeing the service.

More than two dozen companies and institutions announced that they are partners with Google Health, including Walgreens, CVS, the American Heart Association, Quest Diagnostics, Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and the Cleveland Clinic.

Mary Adams, 45, a Cleveland Clinic patient who participated in the Google Health pilot, said that she was initially concerned about the privacy of her medical information. Still, she felt safe enough to enroll and has been using the service for six months, linking it with an online health management tool from the Cleveland Clinic and adding information on prescriptions and doctors to her online profile.

The service, still a non-final ''beta'' version, does not include ads. Besides importing records from providers, users can enhance their password-protected profiles with details such as allergies and medications, they can search for doctors and they can locate Web-based health-related tools. The health venture provides fodder for privacy watchdogs who believe Google already has access to too much about the interests and habits of its users in its logs of search requests and its vaults of e-mail archives.

Pam Dixon, executive director of the World Privacy Forum, said services such as Google Health are troublesome because they aren't covered by the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act, or HIPAA. Passed in 1996, HIPAA set strict standards for the security of medical records.

By transferring records to an external service, patients could unwittingly make it easier for the government, a legal adversary or a marketing concern to obtain private information, Dixon said. During a webcast earlier this week, Mayer said users' health information is stored at Google's ''highest level of security.'' Mayer said in an interview with The Associated Press that users' health information will not show up in search results.

Utah company is participating: A Utah company is one of 14 businesses and organizations that are part of the offerings of Google Health. MediConnect Global of South Jordan offers to retrieve medical records for Google Health users and to identify information from them to be placed in their profiles.

MediConnect will digitize the records from health care providers identified by customers. Customers will be able to access their records online or download them to their own computers. "MediConnect's medical record retrieval service allows people to have access to information from their personal health history from anywhere in the world at anytime," said Amy Rees Anderson, company CEO. The company charges a fee of $98 for up to 100 pages and 10 cents per page for additional records, said Cory Maloy, director of communications. The company complies with the federal health privacy law, he said.



View Original article.

Tuesday, March 11, 2008

B.C. upgrades PharmaNet to advance electronic health care


Victoria, B.C., March 10, 2008 - B.C. is enhancing PharmaNet as the next step in implementing electronic health records by investing $14.2 million in its eDrug project, Health Minister George Abbott announced today.

"Upgrading PharmaNet will help us further improve patient safety and better protect patients from medication errors that occur in a paper-based system," said Abbott. "With the new PharmaNet, physicians and pharmacists will be able to track patient medications between acute care and community settings and provide greater accuracy in the PharmaNet medication profiles."

PharmaNet is internationally recognized as a world-class secure electronic network that protects patient safety. It protects patients from potentially dangerous medication errors, duplications and dangerous combinations of different medications. It records all prescriptions dispensed at B.C. community pharmacies in a central database and checks for interactions.

eDrug is one of seven eHealth projects underway in British Columbia that will use advanced information technology to deliver needed health information instantly to authorized health professionals in B.C. The eDrug project, in addition to delivering the new PharmaNet-eRx system, will:

Provide online tools so physicians and pharmacists can offer affordable, best-practice therapies;
• Provide greater accuracy in the PharmaNet medication profiles by recording both dispensing by the pharmacists, and pickup of the prescription by the patient;
• Reduce administrative time in submitting PharmaCare Special Authority requests;
• Strengthen the privacy and security features of PharmaNet; and
• Over time, enable physicians to prescribe online.

"Pharmacists welcome upgrades to PharmaNet that will improve patient care," said Marshall Moleschi, Registrar of the College of Pharmacists of BC. "Updating PharmaNet has the potential to improve patient safety by reducing adverse drug events, avoid treatment delays and call backs leading to more effective and efficient care delivery."

Funding for B.C.'s eDrug program comes from the Province and Canada Health Infoway, a federally-funded, not-for-profit organization that is leading the development and adoption of electronic health records across Canada. Infoway is contributing $8.8 million and the Province is contributing $5.4 million of the $14.2 million agreement.

"PharmaNet has been one of Canada's leading e-health initiatives for more than a decade," said Richard Alvarez, president and CEO of Canada Health Infoway. "By connecting physicians and pharmacists, the new PharmaNet-eRx system will help reduce medication-related adverse events, increase patient safety and result in better health outcomes for patients throughout British Columbia."

Currently MAXIMUS BC and Systems Xcellence Inc. (SXC) maintain PharmaNet for the Ministry of Health's Pharmaceutical Services Division. The enhancements to PharmaNet are in a Change Order to the existing Master Services Agreement for an additional $14.2 million. The Change Order will see MAXIMUS BC configure and install a new SXC application as well as integration of this product with other eHealth components.

"This is major improvement to the already world-class PharmaNet system," said MAXIMUS BC president Duff Lang. "Improving information access for pharmacists and the public will truly deliver on the eHealth vision and will enable us to continue our quality service on behalf of the province."

All patient information will be protected by privacy measures that are among the strongest in Canada. The personal health information in PharmaNet and other components of a new electronic health record will comply with applicable privacy protective legislation, including the Province's Freedom of Information and Protection of Privacy Act, the Personal Information Privacy Act, the Pharmacists, Pharmacy Operations and Drug Scheduling Act and provisions of the Health Act that govern the use of information for health-related purposes. In addition, access to patient information will be restricted to only those having legal authority and a clear need to access the information.

Canada Health Infoway is leading the development and implementation of electronic health projects across Canada. Infoway works with provinces and territories to invest in electronic health projects, which support safer, more efficient health care delivery. Fully respecting patient confidentiality, these private and secure systems provide health care professionals with immediate access to complete and accurate patient information, enabling better decisions about diagnosis and treatment. The result is a sustainable health care system offering improved quality, accessibility, productivity and cost savings.

View Original Press Release