Monday Morning Update 6/22/09

From The PACS Designer: “Re: Ning. TPD was looking for a collaboration tool for a new project and came across Ning. While it is touted as a ‘New Social Network’, it still can be used as a collaboration network when participants are working from remote locations and need to remain part of a discussion process or work development activity that spans multiple locations. Even HIStalkers could form their own social networks based on HIStalk postings and topics!” I actually tried it awhile back and liked it.  

jobvent

From Custard’s Last Stand: “Re: ‘I hate my job’ blog. Perhaps this kind of info could be off to the side somewhere, like a sub-blog? I do think there is some value in learning about company cultures, trends, how they treat employees, etc. BEFORE you apply for a job.” I agree, although the happy employees aren’t usually as motivated to post as the unhappy ones, so every employer looks bad. You also can’t tell if anyone is who they say (management? competitor? psychopath?) JobVent is the big one, but I’m pretty sure I remember that companies have successfully threatened the site and forced them to remove negative postings, so it’s still caveat emptor. Just to give you an idea of the scores: Cerner (-1326), McKesson Provider Technologies (-24), Epic Systems (152), Meditech (-234), and Perot Systems (-545).

From Ralph Hinckley: “Re: Orion Health. I’m a former employee, laid off in January. They had another round this week, at least eight in the US and unknown in New Zealand.” Unverified.

Listening: Dengue Fever, an LA band whose music sounds like something out of Vietnam in 1969: Cambodian pop mixed with US psychedelia. I cheerfully acknowledge that maybe it’s not for everyone. Also: The Sword, Austin-based Sabbath soundalikes.

I was reading about medical fraud in which low-paid hospital clerks sell copies of the insurance or welfare cards of patients, which are then used to submit fraudulent bills (which, surprisingly, are usually paid). The article made an interesting point: welfare patients don’t get any kind of receipt that shows what has been paid on their behalf, so they couldn’t detect the fraudulent use of their credentials even if they wanted to. We’ve really made it too easy: someone else not only pays for the care, but the recipients never even see a bill.

Three Cleveland community health centers will get $2.7 million in stimulus money next month, with an EpicCare-compatible EMR on the list of projects to be funded.

Don’t forget the HIStalk Events Calendar, where you can post your HIT-related conference or Webinar for free. A couple of new conferences have been added.

Parkland goes live with its inpatient EMR (Epic, if I remember right and always a safe guess if the hospital is > 400 beds).

emanuel

The New York Review of Books covers Healthcare, Guaranteed: A Simple, Secure Solution for America, by Ezekiel Emanuel. A good quote: “To remain competitive, many not-for-profit hospitals promote their bottom line just like their for-profit counterparts, vigorously advertising their facilities and services to the public. No other health care system is as focused on generating income as ours, and in no other country is medical care marketed and advertised so aggressively, as if it were just another commodity in trade. This increases health costs, while hospitals concentrate on the delivery of profitable, rather than effective, services. It also favors those who can pay over those who need medical care but can’t afford it … In 1980, after medical organizations lost some costly antitrust trials, in which they were accused of such offenses as limiting doctor fees or denying staff privileges, the AMA changed its ethical guidelines, declaring medicine to be both a business and a profession. This lowered the AMA’s barriers to the commercialization of medical practice, allowing physicians to participate in any legal profit-making business arrangement that did not harm patients.” The answer he’s proposing sounds like the Mayo (and Kaiser, Marshfield, Geisinger, etc.) model, with multispecialty group practices made up of salaried doctors.

Mediware announces the price it paid for BI software vendor SciHealth: $2 million, plus potential incentive payments.

Sentry Data Systems announces that it has added wireless scanning to its Sentinel RCM hospital pharmacy management system (procurement, operational visibility, financial management, and department management). They’ve also created a site that covers the Deficit Reduction Act that mandates true NDC number reporting on Medicaid drug claims (a good reminder that despite good intentions, the government is clueless about how healthcare is actually delivered). Sentry’s DRA white paper is a great intro, including why it’s hard to comply.

Good thing I got the Mac and iPod Touch when I did: the lines at the Apple store are back, this time for the new iPhone 3G S (or maybe the $99 basic iPhone). And speaking of Apple, The Wall Street Journal says CEO Steve Jobs received a liver transplant two months ago in Tennessee, where wait times are short. Only two hospitals there do adult liver transplants and Vanderbilt denies it was them, but I wouldn’t bet on that.

Louisiana passes a bill that will set aside $5 million to provide EMR loans to providers (or more accurately, to give the state access to stimulus money).

Dennis Quaid and his wife settle the lawsuit of their heparin-overdosed children against Cedars Sinai for $500K.

Oracle buys drug industry manufacturing software vendor Conformia Software.

I admit I’m stupid: I don’t see how it’s possible for a company to buy its parent like WebMD did (and for stock instead of cash at that).

eClinicalWorks signs a partnership deal with Scantronix, which converts paper medical records into digital ones.

Texas billionaire Allan Stanford, whose Antigua bank is the primary shareholder of healthcare software vendor Health Systems Solutions, is in US custody and charged with a $7 billion Ponzi scheme that could put him away for 250 years. Antigua’s bank regulator has been charged with accepting bribes from the bank. His bigshot lawyer defended Enron bankers, cult leader David Koresh, and former House Majority Leader Tom DeLay.

E-mail me.

News 6/19/2009

From Chuck Ponozzo: “Re: latest EMR developments. I attended via phone and Webex both the HIT Policy Committee call and the CCHIT Town Call meetings over the past two days. First I was a little disappointed in the Policy Committee and ONC for not having some of the discussions hashed out prior to the meeting and that nothing was approved to move forward. ONC let the media hype up this meeting as the place where meaningful use is going to be defined, and yes we have some idea, but we are all left sitting on the edge of our seats for another month before anyone makes a decisions. Even more concerning to me, though, is the way CCHIT is going about their business without any regard for the fact that they haven’t been identified as a certifying body and the folks on the Certification / Adoption Workgroup didn’t seem like they were ready to anoint them.”

From Former Sunquester: “Re: reports. The fact that you are squashing reports from current and former Sunquesters is disgusting.” Someone claiming to work for a couple of vendors keeps sending anonymous hatergrams with unsubstantiated claims about employee discontent in various forms. Employee-employer squabbles, even real ones, are not interesting to anyone else, so I’m not likely to run them here. I complained bitterly and regularly when I was unhappily working for a vendor several years ago, fantasizing that an outraged world would rush to my side if I kept moaning about it. I finally grew up and realized that (a) people had their own problems and didn’t care about mine, and (b) I looked stupid for whining instead of doing something about it. If  it’s that bad, leave. If you can’t do better, be grateful they’re paying you when nobody else wants to. That’s the harsh lesson I had to learn.

From Lemmy: “Re: Harvard Vanguard. Anne Fitzgerald, co-chief of operations and former CIO, is leaving on July 15. From the e-mail announcement: ‘Under Anne’s leadership, we completed major upgrades to Epic, launched three other Atrius Health groups on Epic, designed and built CHAPS (Community Hospital And Physician Systems Initiative) which can identify our patients when they arrive at a community hospital’s emergency room, increased the visibility and support for our ancillary and specialty services with investments such as the Central Lab move, PACS selection, pain management service and others, began the Site Councils as a way of moving to more local decision-making, and undertook a major investment in improving job do-ability.” Sounds like a mutual admiration society, other than the fact that she’s leaving. Maybe she took my advice above.

Physician warning: someone is faxing practices claiming to be with Medicare (and sporting its logo) and asking to have account information faxed immediately to prevent payment delays. It’s a scam.

New poll to your right: are the meaningful use criteria contained in HHS’s preliminary matrix too easy, too hard, or juuuuusssst right?

Cerner shares hit a 52-week high today. I’m squinting at the historical chart and it looks like CERN share prices just missed hitting an all-time high.

HIMSS says hospitals will spend over $14 billion on IT systems in the next five years.

Meditech gets a 6.0 sale to a 700-bed hospital in England, with Perot part of the deal for implementation consulting.

CalPERS, Anthem Blue Cross, Medco Health Solutions, and Blue Shield of California launch a big e-prescribing project.

googleforms

Here’s something I bet you can use: Google Forms, called a SurveyMonkey killer by some, lets you create online forms that can collect Web-based responses by e-mail or in a Google Docs worksheet, making it perfect for doing polls or surveys. You just go to Google Docs and click New, then Form. I’ll be putting it to a couple of immediate uses, I expect.

Noteworthy Medical Systems announces the release of NetPay, a Web-based application interfaced to its practice management system that lets doctors collect patient payments as they leave the office.

An oncologist arrested on national TV’s “To Catch a Predator” for soliciting what he thought was a 13-year-old girl online says he should go free because alleged explicit chat room logs were lost when the hard drive of a Perverted Justice investigator failed. The prosecutor says it doesn’t matter since he has a saved copy, but the defense is arguing that there’s no chain of custody. The prosecutor counters with what sounds like a clincher: the doc showed up to have sex with a child and was caught on national TV, hard drive or not. Doh!

South Carolina, like other cash-strapped states, holds a health IT summit with the objective of getting federal money (EMR Welfare, I’m going to start calling it) and maybe even helping a patient or two in the process if the cards are right.

medaxis

A company called Clear Innova implies that it has launched a new radiology information system, but it appears to be a marketing company pitching Origin from Medaxis.

A former Army surgeon and assistant medical professor at Washington University in St. Louis is implicated by major newspapers as having been paid $800K by medical device maker Medtronic for fabricating a favorable study of one of its devices.

halifax

Halifax Health (FL) chooses Meru Networks as the wireless network provider for its new 500,000-square-foot building.

So whatever happened with the April DoD raid on Siemens in Malvern? You would think they would have announced something if they found it.

University of Iowa Hospitals will lay off 130 employees.

Jobs: Senior Developer, VP Sales – Healthcare Software, Cerner eMAR Project Manager, McKesson PACS Administrators.

The gossip site paying OctoMom to follow her around with cameras is charged with violating California labor laws, leading to its defense that it’s a “news-gathering organization” not subject to entertainment industry laws.

I told you a few days ago that hospital IT people see this depressingly regularly, but here’s a new example: an employee of a Florida hospital is arrested for using his work PC and printer to print child porn. I guess site-blocking software isn’t working or isn’t being implemented.

Unibased Systems Architecture opens a demo center in Chesterfield, MO.

PACS vendor AMICAS will join the Russell 3000 stock index.

Informatics Corporation of America markets its ICA CareAlign as a “green” solution that leaves legacy systems intact, reduces paper and duplicate work, and reuses patient information.

Michigan’s medical society, Microsoft, Covisint, and PBM company MedImpact Healthcare Systems announce a collaboration that will give users of the medical society’s portal access to the HealthVault information of patients.

Interesting lawsuit: two male nurses sue their former hospital employer claiming they were illegally discriminated against since only they, not their female colleagues, were called when patients got violent. They say they were fired for complaining and want money for medical expenses, injuries, and emotional pain.

E-mail me.


HERtalk by Inga

From No satisfaction: “Re: Healthcare reform and insurance for all. This op-ed piece in the WSJ is a ‘must-read,’ suggesting that our failing healthcare system is also the fault of bloated Medicaid, Medicare, and other public programs that have strained state and federal finances. In my opinion, it’s time to move towards a free market. This much government in the middle adds cost, and long term means more people with less or no coverage. In all of modern history, no central government has ever succeeded in controlling a nation’s economy or managing its industries. This noble experiment will be no different. Start getting rid of insurance and let people pay for their care out of pocket — that way, they can truly compare prices and quality. Adding more government to something the government is already running that isn’t working isn’t going to fix anything!”

From Winnie Ryder:Re: Hospital embezzlement. Thought you’d like this article.” Winnie forwarded a story that claims that women over the age of 45 are most likely to commit inter-office fraud and embezzlement in hospitals. Reasons include the need for money, revenge, and the the thrill of the challenge. My take: it’s best to take care of the mature women in your world.

And obviously hospitals in Czechoslovakia have figured that out. The nursing shortage there has led some institutions to offer creative perks to attract workers. Candidates seem particularly attracted to offers of free plastic surgery, including tummy tucks, remodeled breasts, and face lifts. I think I’d like to hang out with Nurse Petra, who’s quoted as saying, “I would rather have plastic surgery than a free car.” Heck, if the shortage is that bad, why not ask for both?

SCI Solutions announces the signing of 22 contracts during the first half of their fiscal year, ending on March 31.

scrushy

An Alabama judge orders HealthSouth founder Richard Scrushy to pay shareholders almost $3 billion in damages after being found guilty of liable in a shareholder lawsuit. He denies any knowledge of the fraud scheme that nearly bankrupted HealthSouth.

The state of California files suit against six Target stores, alleging the illegal of dumping hazardous waste, including medical waste, into landfills.

MGMA reports that the starting salaries for physicians in many specialties are on the rise. Neurologists saw the biggest gain, from $200,000 to $230,000 a year, up 15%. Those earning the highest specialty salaries were neurosurgeons ($605,000), while pediatricians started at $132,500.

GE Healthcare’s CTO is named leader of the company’s $6 billion health care initiative. The “healthyimagination” program focuses on improving healthcare for people at a reduced cost.

Congrats to eClinicalWorks CEO and co-founder Girish Kumar Navani for winning the E&Y Entrepreneur of the Year Award for New England in the healthcare technology category.

MedCentral Health System (OH) implements Siemens Soarian Quality Measures to automate chart abstraction and help expedite the submission of quality measures.

WebMD and HLTH Corp. resurrect their merger deal, with WebMD purchasing its parent company in a $2.31 billion, all-stock deal. The transaction is scheduled to close by the end of the year pending regulatory approval.

Ingenix introduces Ingenix Revenue Manager, a new suite of software applications to assist hospitals with RCM activities. The suite includes three separate modules that can be purchased separately or together: Denials Prevention, Appeals Automation, and Denials Analytics.

Hayes Management Consulting just published its summer 2009 issue of the Hayes Review Newsletter. Included in the issue: tips for interoperability design with Ensemble and details on Red Flag Rules.

best childrens

U.S. News Media Group releases its second annual rankings by specialty of America’s Best Children’s Hospitals. Rankings were based on  reputation, medical outcomes, and care-related indicators.

Heritage Valley Health System (PA) selects Allscripts Enterprise EHR for 150 of its employed physicians.

inga 

E-mail Inga.

News 6/17/09

From Scot Silverstein: “Re: your idea of ‘on a less contentious level, at least fully defining the extent of practice variation in real time and alerting physicians of areas for improvement.’ That was an approach suggested over 20 year ago: Perry L. Miller [Yale Center for Medical Informatics}, Expert Critiquing Systems, Springer-Verlag New York, Inc., Secaucus, NJ, 1986. Your ‘anon-a-doc social networking’ idea is interesting, but then how to differentiate advice from good docs and bad docs” I wasn’t necessarily picturing that the docs would be anonymous, so their advice could be evaluated in the same way as Amazon and Citysearch reviewers. And like those sites, I would assume that since good docs vastly outnumber bad ones that an aggregated set of opinions would lean heavily toward the best answer.

From Pharmacist H: “Re: Pittsburgh medication system problems. Whoever wrote about the electronic medication problems of an unnamed vendor is shouting fire in an inferno.”

From HITMan: “Re: physician variation. I am a non-clinican IT guy and CIO. I am constantly amazed by the quality care that my clinician colleagues deliver, but I also keep in mind the point that the most significant healthcare advances in the past 80 years have been driven not by physicians but by public health initiatives (think immunizations). I still think, however, that physicians think too highly of their own value and the quality of their EMR progress notes. Ask some nurses — they would probably have good insight about who really brings value to the health system equation.  Nonetheless, I stand by my comment that variation is the enemy of perfection and that by forcing physicians to deliver care in an evidence based-way (mon dieu!) and standardizing the care they deliver that we can improve the care that we deliver to our customers (I mean patients).” I agree with nearly everything you say, especially the primary role of public health (and not medical treatments) that have extended life expectancy. However, good doctors have told me this: evidence-based medicine works for 80% of the people, but it doesn’t allow physician discretion in identifying and managing the other 20%. Maybe docs ought to be able to justify and exclude those exceptions, which is what all of us would want if we were one of those patients. My working assumptions are (a) doctors don’t go to work each day with the intention of harming patients; (b) they will do the right thing if they know what it is; and (c) the view from the cheap seats is different (sometimes better, most often worse) than from the playing field. Evidence-based care is fine as long as it has been developed and vetted by practicing doctors, which isn’t always the case.

fletcherallen

From Mr. Pepperton: “Re: Fletcher Allen. They have gone live with Epic and the project was a huge success.”

Thanks to DrLyle for his HIStalk Practice writeup on the President’s speech to the AMA yesterday.

HHS publishes its meaningful use matrix (warning: PDF) with these priorities:

  • Improve quality, safety, efficiency, and reduce health disparities
  • Engage patients and families
  • Improve care coordination
  • Improve population and public health
  • Ensure adequate privacy and security protections for personal health information

My first impression: excellent. Some of the criteria will be a bit soft to measure and validate, but most of them are not only solidly thought out, they are objective and absolute. They are ratcheted in through 2015. What do you think? Better or worse than you expected? Inga weighs in below as well.

Nurse Deborah Leyva and a technology attorney (her husband, I think) have put together the HIPAA Survival Guide, which includes a section on HITECH.

McKesson says it won’t raise base salaries of its executive officers in 2010. It also claims it will raise the bar on executive bonuses. That may not have been a coincidental announcement: it hit the wires at about the same time as stories about CEO John Hammergren’s FY2009 compensation: $29.7 million, including a $12 million bonus. That’s damn generous considering the company’s stock dropped 33% over that same period, shafting those worker bees who invested their rather more modest proceeds in company stock. Doesn’t anyone in healthcare work for a reasonable wage any more, other than the few nuns left?

sarasota

Sarasota Memorial Hospital (FL) is using social media to communicate with the public, including Twittering its $49 heart disease checkup special.

GE has set aside $100 million to loan new customers  its EMR systems who don’t have the upfront cash to benefit from ARRA, rather like those used car dealers that offer to use your yet-unreceived tax refund as a down payment. Everybody rides!

vanderbilt

Vanderbilt clinicians and informatics professionals are testing what they say is the first real-time sepsis detection system, to be followed this year with decision support tools to guide its treatment. Their description of a “state-based decision engine” is interesting: “Essentially, this involved breaking down the guidelines into a series of independent processes that can take place sequentially or simultaneously. ‘This really captures the way doctors work. If we see low blood pressure, then we think of one set of treatments. If we see low blood sugar, then we think of another set. If we see the two together, then we consider a third set of possible measures we can take.’”

Sentara Healthcare (VA) works with Picis to integrate its LYNX Medical Systems ED revenue management system with Epic’s EDIS. Sentara says it has gained millions of dollars in revenue from the integration. Picis also announces LYNX C/Point, a revenue management system that reduces the risk of recovery audit contractor (RAC) penalties.

Nuance releases the results of its EHR Meaningful Use Physician Study, which found that more doctors (75%) want a better way to document care than with a mouse and keyboard than want stimulus money (69%).

The AMA adopts principles for EMR breaches: (1) tell the patient; (2) follow appropriate procedures for disclosure; (3) place the interest of the patient first; and (4) give the patient information to mitigate the consequences.

Orlando Portale, Chief Innovation Officer of Palomar Pomerado Health, and Jonathan Bush, CEO of athenahealth will speak at the Fortune tech Brainstorm 2009 next month in Pasadena, CA. Also on the dais: Barry Diller, Robert Iger, Ashton Kutcher, Mark Hurd, and bunch of other business luminaries. Registration costs $3,500 and the hotel is $260 a night. The conference offers press passes, so maybe I’ll show up.

hysteriahospital

New hospital software: Hysteria Hospital: Emergency Ward, a game for the Wii and Nintendo DS systems.

Followers of a saint-like woman named Amma who dispenses hugs and runs charitable hospitals says her methods will be replicated on a larger scale. Among her organization’s projects is healthcare IT. “Amritanandamayi’s volunteers have made significant contributions to various programs in India, including telemedicine and electronic medical records. Gottsegen helped develop a computerized record-keeping system that is now used in all of Amritanandamayi’s medical centers throughout India. He and a team of volunteer software engineers from India and California are adapting it for use in the U.S. health care system. If they can win a piece of the federal stimulus funding earmarked for electronic health records, they hope to compete with other top developers.”

Here’s an interesting quote: “It is no more practical to have ‘health insurance’ to pay for prescription drugs and routine doctor visits than it is to expect your auto insurance to pay for your oil changes and tire rotations … Health insurance does not insure your health, nor was it ever intended to. Health care insurance, formerly called ‘medical insurance,’ is merely an instrument of neutralizing risk … As a strictly financial planning endeavor, the issue never seemed to be discussed in terms of being ‘a right’ or in terms of ‘compassion.’ But ‘medical insurance’ as a component of financial planning has morphed into ‘health care’ as a right for everyone in the new political parlance.”

There’s a nasty brouhaha brewing over at AuntMinnie.com. Dr. Dalai tells me, involving an Ohio hospital group’s decision to replace its local radiology group with a national firm. I couldn’t follow it all on the forums, but it involves back room deals, accusations of shoddy work, tie-ins of the new company with Mass General and at least one executive of the American College of Radiology (to which the displaced rads pay dues), and clueless hospital administration. It’s not IT related, but if you want to witness the squabbling that happens when a healthcare provider’s income is threatened (both the hospital’s and the rad group’s, in this case) it’s worth a look as a picture of things to come.

luckies

Inga ran an old commercial in which doctors extolled the virtues of Camel cigarettes. Interesting: this article points out that JAMA accepted tobacco company advertising starting in the 1930s, although that has now replaced by the drug companies that fuel 20% of its budget. And this quote might be apropos about HIMSS and HIT vendors if you swap the words: “… the AMA has found that it can’t rely on membership dues to generate the kind of revenue that the AMA leadership is looking for. Instead, they’ve turned to corporate sponsorship—businesses with money to make by casting a veneer of medical respectability around their pursuit of profit find a relationship with the AMA to be useful.”

AMICAS pays off patent troll Acacia Research, which if I recall, claims a few generic patents it bought means it owns the concept of PACS.

Weird News Andy, an artist whose medium is obscure news stories, has been at it again:

  • A hospital nurse in London is fired for shutting off a baby’s heart alarm so she could continue chatting with another child’s parents.
  • Also in the UK, a nurse is fired for complying with the wishes of an elderly patient’s family to perform no aggressive measures on her.
  • A British female athlete dies in a private hospital when doctors bungle a surgery to reduce sweating of her hands and feet.
  • A Polish woman wakes up in a morgue body bag after being declared dead.
  • A new study says finds that men are 40% more likely to die of cancer than women because they refuse to see their doctor.

E-mail me.


HERtalk by Inga

matrix

Full disclosure: I did not sit in on the HIT Policy Committee meeting today, though I did read through the “meaningful use matrix” and other documents listed on the ONC website. I realize the document is still in draft mode and these are not the final definitions. However, I’m not understanding how some of the stated “policy priorities” match with the measurements and objectives. For example, one of the stated policy priorities is to improve quality and efficiency and to reduce health disparities. To prove “meaningful use” as it relates to this priority, a provider must generate quality reporting measurements (e.g, % of diabetics with A1c under control and % of hypertensive patients with blood pressure under control, etc.) For this same quality priority, the listed “objectives” for 2011 include maintaining current medication and problem lists and incorporating lab results into EHR. In other words, there is no clear tie-in between how meaningful use will be measured (by producing reports) and the policy priority (improving quality). The assumption is that if a provider maintains a current medication and problem list, care will improve. But does that correlation really exist? Admittedly the connection between some of the priorities and measurements seem more straightforward than this one. Regardless, if we are going to be handing out millions of dollars, I want to feel assured that my money makes a difference. Simply being able to create a report does not mean a doctor is necessarily providing better care.

Should you be looking for a job change, Computerworld just announced its Top 100 Best Places to Work in IT 2009. If you would prefer working for a health system, try Lehigh Valley, Cedars-Sinai, Texas Health Resource, HCA, VHA, Norton Healthcare, or Adventist. Lehigh Valley earned the highest spot (43), largely because of its strong commitment to employee feedback. Over 200 IT staff receive annual reviews that include personalized comments from a team director CIO Harry Lukens, plus an annual review meeting also attended by the CIO. Employees also have a chance to participate in a "Wild Idea Team” that is tasked with finding new technologies for the organization. The  best HIT vendor employer: Cerner. Perks at Cerner include work-out facilities, including an indoor pool, a Montessori school, and an on-site primary care center. Free pizza was not mentioned. Quest Diagnostic, Compuware, and Red Hat also made the list.

Virginia is the latest state to formally announce plans for a statewide HIE. Governor Timothy M. Kaine says the Virginia Health Exchange Network will connect health plans, health systems, and state agencies.

KLAS releases its annual rankings for best-performing medical equipment vendors. The research company assigned Best in KLAS honors to six companies across seven categories.

A judge sentences a former Cedars-Sinai Medical Center employee to four years in prison after he pleaded guilty to stealing patient information to defraud insurance companies of $354,000. The former billing department employee billed insurance companies $1.3 million for treatment never provided. He gas to repay the $354,000 plus $62,000 in back taxes and penalties.

QuadraMed’s Affinity Revenue Cycle Management M8 software is now available for general release. QuadraMed also just introduced its Quantim HIM Workflow solution.

New Island Hospital (NY) names Larry Maggiotto its new AVP and CIO. Interim CIO Chris Cody is promoted to assistant director of health information management.

Certify Data Systems closes a round of Series B funding led by Ziegler HeatlhVest Partners LP.

Geneva Medical Center (OH) launches its EHR June 30th. Geneva is the first University Hospital system facility to go live on the $100 million system.  

Newly live on EHR: Fletcher Allen HealthCare (VT). The hospital is in the midst of a $57 million project that includes automating its 750 affiliated medical practices.

PatientCompass, RelayHealth’s online business office solution, achieves Level 1 Service Provider Certification and has been validated as PCI DSS-compliant.

The CEO of the 15-bed Drumright Regional Hospital (OK) reports their Cerner-hosted EHR is fully operational and helping increase revenues.

As evidenced by the recent departure of Andy Eckert at Eclipsys, non-virtual organizations may be returning. Eckert chose not to leave California to live in Eclipsys’ Atlanta headquarters. Experts are now seeing more workers returning to traditional offices, particularly senior managers. I suppose if you have been working virtually for years and have to return a “real” office, at least you have a big shopping spree to look forward to.

pump phone

HIT Ladies: we are not alone. Researchers find that women are an increasingly important market for technology brands and that an estimated 45 million of us bought a digital product in the last six months. Sexy iPhones are just as much a fashion essential these days as the perfect shade of lipstick, and, of course, sexy pumps.

 inga

E-Inga.

McKesson Announces New Technology Solutions Head

blake

McKesson announced this morning that Patrick Blake, 45, has been promoted to executive vice president and group president of McKesson Technology Solutions, effective immediately. He replaces Pamela Pure, who left the company in March 2009, with responsibilities over McKesson Provider Technologies, McKesson Health Solutions, RelayHealth, and McKesson’s International Operations Group.

Blake was previously president of McKesson Specialty Care Solutions, its specialty drug distribution services division. He joined the company in 1996 and held previous roles in the company’s drug distribution businesses. He will report to CEO John Hammergren and serve on McKesson’s executive committee.

CIO Unplugged – 6/15/09

The views and opinions expressed in this blog are mine personally, and are not necessarily representative of Texas Health Resources or its subsidiaries.

Meaningful Meaningful Use?
By Ed Marx

I ran a ‘night before vacation’ errand to Loews. As I completed the purchase, the store manager interrupted on the overhead, “employees and customers, head immediately to the break room. A tornado has been spotted and is headed our direction.” The tornado never materialized and we were cleared to leave. The rains were torrential, coming in successive waves, each one more violent than the previous. The storm died down but then kept returning. Over the next 24 hours, we had enough rain and lightning to shut down the airport for several hours, delaying our trip…which gave me time to create this post. We may have set a record for precipitation. I don’t believe we will need to water our lawn for the rest of the summer.

There is another type of watering that does not saturate but dilutes. We use concentrates that require adding water to dilute the mix, making it less powerful. Coffee is a good example. I like strong coffee, so I often add more grounds than required. Others like to pour half a cup and then fill with water. This dilutes the intent of the coffee, and as a card carrying Starbucks aficionado, I find the practice almost heretical.

The official definition of “meaningful use” will emerge this month. As a healthcare executive and tax payer, I will be offended if the clarified meaning waters down the intent of the original language. Indications are that, as a byproduct of our political process, the official definition will lack the intended punch that could truly advance the adoption of healthcare information technology to improve outcomes. In other words, it will be watered down. Given the incentive nature (increased payments) for meaningful use, it’s hard to understand why anyone would set the bar so low. If the goal is to accelerate change, we need to shake off the political pressures and do the right thing.

Contemplate the following. CPOE would not be required for a couple of years. Initially, a 50% order rate would be considered meaningful. Health Information Exchange is considered achieved if you are able to send and received scanned documents. Clinical decision support, arguably the “holy grail” when it comes to clinical benefit realization, may not be required until 2015. That’s 6 years away! Incentives should be a stretch goal, not something already achieved by a majority of hospitals today.

I recommend taking an activist approach and pushing for higher standards. Do we want change, or not? As healthcare executives, we can exert profound influence in our communities, professional societies, affinity groups, and government to ask for more meaningful meaningful use. Let’s push ourselves and our broken healthcare system to accelerate the adoption of healthcare information technology. Who drinks watered down coffee anyway?


Ed Marx is senior vice president and CIO at Texas Health Resources in Dallas-Fort Worth, TX. Ed encourages your interaction through this blog. (Use the “add a comment” function at the bottom of each post.) You can also connect with him directly through his profile pages on social networking sites LinkedIn and Facebook, and you can follow him via Twitter – User Name “marxists.”

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