
Psychiatric News August 20, 2004
Volume 39 Number 16
© 2004 American Psychiatric Association
p. 8
Improved Health System Needs Electronic Base, Says Thompson
Christine Lehmann
The new national health information technology coordinator proposes
giving physicians financial incentives to adopt electronic health
records.
The strategic outline for implementing electronic health records (EHRs)
within the next decade for nearly all Americans was released at last month's
Secretarial Summit on Health Information Technology (HIT) in Washington,
D.C.
Tommy Thompson, secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS), announced
"The Decade of Health Information Technology" to accelerate
national progress in adopting health information technology.
"The health care sector needs to run, not walk, toward realizing the
potential for improving our health care system," Thompson said in an HHS
press release.
APA was invited to participate in the summit by Thompson and was
represented by Nancy Trenti, an associate director in the Department of
Government Relations. APA plans to meet with David Brailer, M.D., Ph.D.,
national HIT coordinator, in the fall to discuss safeguards for privacy in
electronic health records, Trenti told Psychiatric News.
The benefits of adopting an EHR system include improved quality and safety
of health care, better use of resources and cost savings, and increased
practice of evidence-based medicine, according to the strategic plan.
"Health records should follow the patient, and clinicians should have
access to critical health information when treatment decisions are being
made," said Brailer at the summit.
He prepared the report, titled "The Decade of Health Information
Technology: Delivering Consumer-centric and Information-Rich Health
Care," that Thompson presented at the summit. It will be used to guide
publicand private-sector efforts to implement HIT.
President Bush issued an executive order in April calling for a national
EHR system to be established within a decade and the creation of Brailer's
position within HHS (Psychiatric News, June 4).
The AMA said in a press release that it "welcomed the strategic
report and is committed to helping fulfill the promise of an affordable,
standards-based, electronic health record."
There is bipartisan support in Congress for establishing a national HIT
system. Rep. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.) introduced comprehensive HIT legislation
last month in the House of Representatives (see story below).
Incentivizing Physicians
Only about 20 percent of physicians and 13 percent of hospitals reported in
2002 that they have adopted EHR systems, according to Brailer.
The biggest barriers to HIT adoption among doctors are the high
costsmore than $30,000 per doctoras well as staff time to
transition to EHRs and the lack of standards for exchanging information among
different systems, according to a press release from the American College of
Physicians (ACP).
ACP has proposed that the government provide financial assistance to
physicians to implement EHRs including grants, tax credits, and low-interest
rate loans.
HHS will consider several financial incentives including reimbursing
clinicians for using EHRs consistent with current Medicare law and paying
clinicians for delivering the best quality of care rather than the highest
volume of care, said Brailer.
To better understand the value of these options from a societal and
industry perspective, Thompson appointed a Health Information Technology
Leadership Panel. The group must present its findings to Thompson by October,
according to Brailer's report.
Securing Private Information
Ensuring that private health information is protected and accessible only
to authorized people is another key element of Brailer's plan. The national
HIT system must comply with federal standards for privacy and security
mandated by the 1996 Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
(HIPAA), Brailer stated in the report.
HHS adopted the final security standards last year to protect patient
identification when health information is transmitted electronically.
The Department of Veterans Affairs (VA) has developed a HIPAA-compatible
EHR system known as the VistA-Office Electronic Health Record, now used at
more than 1,300 VA facilities in the United States. The VA plans to make a
software version available to the private sector in late 2005.
Private HIT groups last month volunteered to develop the criteria to
certify that an EHR system is functional and secure and can exchange data with
other electronic health data systems, according to HHS.
In related news, HHS will publish a proposed regulation this year on
standards to facilitate electronic prescribing as mandated by last year's
Medicare law (Psychiatric News, May 21). A House subcommittee on
health recommended to HHS officials last month that e-prescribing records
should be designed to be compatible with future EHR systems, according to the
July 23 CongressDaily.
A summary of "The Decade of Health Information Technology:
Delivering Consumer-centric and Information-Rich Health Care" and fact
sheet are posted online at
<www.hhs.gov/news/press/2004pres/20040721.html>.
Related Articles:
-
DB Reaches Out to Local Legislator
Psychiatr News 2004 39: 8.
[Full Text]
-
Legislation Aims to Hasten Transition To Electronic Health Information System
- Christine Lehmann
Psychiatr News 2004 39: 8.
[Full Text]
Get information about faster international access.
a>
Privacy Policy
Copyright © 2004
American Psychiatric Association.
All rights reserved.
Home
| Search
| Current Issue
| Past Issues
| Subscribe
| All APPI Journals
| Help
| Contact Us
|