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News 2/24/10

February 23, 2010 News 8 Comments

From The PACS Designer: “Re: HIPAA Survival Guide. Deborah Leyva of the Health & Technology Blog has posted the Second Edition of the HIPAA Survival Guide for download.”

hp

Just published by The Huffington Post Investigative Fund: FDA is “moving closer” to regulating EMRs after receiving reports of six patient deaths and 44 injuries related to system malfunctions. Examples included an OR system whose lockups forced nurses to re-enter data from memory and another that didn’t display allergies correctly (hardly news if you’ve worked in HIT for any length of time, but apparently FDA was surprised). An FDA official admitted that the agency has steered clear of regulating HIT, but says, “In light of the safety issues that have been reported to us, we believe that a framework of federal oversight of HIT needs to assure patient safety.” Reaction from vendor executives at the recent hearings was interesting: Epic’s Carl Dvorak was quoted as saying regulation wouldn’t necessarily ensure safer products or encourage innovation, while Cerner says it supports making voluntary safety reports mandatory because it’s “the right thing to do.”

I have a couple of interviews yet to post, so once those are running, I promise you will see fewer HIStalk e-mail blasts. All of the interviews were fun to do and I’m pleased to bring them to you. I’m hoping to clear the decks before HIMSS since you know I’ll be writing every day from there.

hitmen

This is new at HIMSS: the naming of the HITmen (and women) of 2010, the most powerful healthcare IT leaders. There’s an invitation-only reception at the conference and some PR, I’m sure, for the winners. Some familiar names are on the host committee: Jonathan Bush of athenahealth, John Halamka of BIDMC, Steve Lieber of HIMSS, and the one that sticks out like a sore thumb, Mr. HIStalk – CEO of HIStalk (and yes, I’ve taken considerable e-mail ribbing about that, but I swear the CEO thing wasn’t my idea and I have zero delusions of grandeur). More to come.

Secure access vendor Imprivata announces the formation of a healthcare division and the hiring of HIMSS chair Barry Chaiken, MD as chief medical officer.

sts

Here’s a shout-out for Software Testing Solutions LLC, a new Platinum Sponsor of HIStalk. The Tucson company’s RATIO tools perform automated software testing, which I hope you hospitals and practices are doing before simply moving vendor code to production (both unexpected bugs and manual testing are expensive, as I can vouch from unfortunately personal experience). You set the application environment, the scope, and the transaction volume, then let the script take over to perform and document the tests (it even works with Citrix). If you have Epic inpatient or ambulatory, Eclipsys SCM, or Sunquest, you could be validating your orderables, generating test billing transactions, and validating new vendor releases and interface changes with minimal effort and with documented consistency. Thanks much to Software Testing Solutions for supporting HIStalk.

HealthStream’s Q4 numbers: revenue up 12%, EPS $0.47 vs. $0.07, although some one-time adjustments threw the numbers off a bit.

Weird News Andy expands his media sources to video, locating this story about a Kentucky psychiatrist who attacked a patient in his office with a sword, with his only statement after the fact being “four quarts low on the truck.” His patient, unfortunately, sustained life-threatening chest wounds. The uncharacteristically somber WNA also finds this story that he captions as “Patients or Guinea Pigs,” describing the FDA’s OK to dispense with informed consent guidelines for EDs involved in a resuscitation study.

Wellmont Health System (TN) names Kent Petty as VP/CIO.

encore

I figure it’s the least I can do to wish Encore Health Resources a happy first birthday since they’ll be buying a few hundred of you drinks and food next Monday evening at the HIStalk reception, so here’s to them (and their reception co-sponsors Symantec and Evolvent).

Redwood MedNet and Thayer County Health Services connect their respective HIEs as a demonstration of the Health Internet using Mirth Corporation’s Mirth MUx (Meaningful Use Exchange), built on ONCHIT’s CONNECT software.

The fight is on for Amicas, with Merge Healthcare putting a $248 million offer on the table next to the earlier $217 million one from Thoma Bravo. Amicas already agreed to the Thoma Bravo offer, so the company is urging shareholders to vote that way, saying it doesn’t trust Merge’s financing.

My upcoming guest editorial for Inside Healthcare Computing: Dark Side on Line One: If Cash Really is King, Now’s the Time to Leave That Hospital Job. A sample of its caffeine-fueled prose: “If you have a loving, loyal hospital spouse who makes you happy and puts up with your idiosyncrasies, then think carefully before running off with the tarted up, drug-seeking vendor stripper who is whispering in your ear to throw it all away to run off to Las Vegas with her to gamble. It’s not nearly as fun as it looks.” It’s not Camus, but it’s what I do.

Porter Medical Center (VT) gets a mention in the local newspaper for its planned Meditech implementation, which awaits certificate of need approval. I like the CFO’s response to possible ARRA incentives: “There are all kinds of experts at the state and national level that swear that this will save money. I’d be the last person to try to guarantee savings.”

Also getting a nice newspaper story on its EMR implementation: Stormont-Vail HealthCare (KS).

More on the pharma-sponsored depression “test” that WebMD ran, pitching Lilly’s Cymbalta: no matter how you answered the 10 questions, the response was always “You may be at risk for major depression.”

Nevada banks are pre-qualifying doctors for EMR purchases just like they do for mortgages, expecting a jump in Q2 purchases. On the one hand, banks say nearly all doctors are contemplating an EMR purchase. On the other, falling home values mean banks aren’t as willing to take personal guarantees for the loans. A nice article by the Las Vegas Business Press.

TriZetto launches its PHR for health plan members. The press release was full of a lot of product names that I wasn’t really interested enough to follow, but it does interestingly distinguish EMRs from EHRs (as I do).

Genesis HealthCare (OH) seeks $25 million in taxpayer-backed loans to Epic, which it hopes will quality it for $12.5 million in stimulus money.

A Maryland fire department’s computer system loses over 10,000 ambulance transport records and fails to file required reports when its computer system has problems in its first year of use. The $275K HealthWares reporting system has been scrapped, with the head of the firefighter’s union saying, “”I thought there was no reason to purchase this when probably an overwhelming majority of fire departments in Maryland use EMAIS for free. There was no reason at all to reinvent the wheel. It was a complete waste of money.”

Robert Miller is promoted to North American president of iSoft.

The White House wants to create a government-wide Federal HIT Task Force, chaired by David Blumenthal, that would coordinate healthcare IT among federal agencies. Those could include the VA, DoD, Social Security, CDC, NIH, and FDA.

Indian Health Service will upgrade its RPMS EMR system to meet meaningful use requirements, including addition of a master person index, a patient flow dashoard, and an event tracking tool to ensure follow-up of abnormal lab results.

Odd hospital lawsuit: a city judge held in a mental health facility for court-ordered evaluation of suicidal behavior files suit against more than 30 employees of the health system, the district attorney, other county attorneys, and Aramark. When contacted about the suit, his only comment was, “Payback is a (expletive), and I get to reform mental healthcare in the process.”

E-mail me.

HERtalk by Inga

Clearly HIT vendors and their PR companies are working overtime to issue pre-HIMSS press releases. Some of the news is meaty, though a fair number are a bit more ho-hum. Save yourself some time and peruse these highlights.

LSU (LA) expands its HealthLink project to include clinical data exchange between the LSU health system and its regional physicians. LSU Healthlink will use CarefX’s Fusionfx product to facilitate data access.

sjrmc

South Jersey Healthcare Regional Medical Center selects Patient Care Technology Systems’ Amelior Tracker to manage physician location and communication.

WellStar Health System (GA) selects ICA’s CareAlign Solution as its connected health technology platform.

Emergin, a division of Philips Healthcare, announces a new interface between the Emergin alert management platform and Voalte’s communication server. The integration will facilitate alert message notifications from the Emergin system to Apple iPhones and iPod Touches and provide real-time communication between caregivers.

HealthPort says it has added electronic delivery functionality to its release of information process.

somerset

Somerset Hospital (PA) contracts with McKesson for its PROmanager-Rx system to automate medication dispensing. Somerset is also McKesson Paragon user.

Northern Michigan Regional Hospital picks Medicity’s Novo Grid technology to provide electronic health information exchange among its hospitals and physicians.

PatientKeeper partners with NextGate to offer NextGate’s enterprise MPI solution for its customers. NextGate’s MatchMetrix Suite will connect with the PatientKeeper platform to provide a single view of patient information.

mike sweeney

maxIT Healthcare announces a number of leadership changes,  including the promotion of Mike Sweeney from divisional VP of strategic partnerships to EVP of strategy and corporate development. Mark Fangman is maxIT’s new EVP of sales and operations and David Leaman is a divisional VP of sales.

Childrens Hospital Los Angeles plans to deploy GetWellNetwork’s GetWell Town solution when it opens in spring 2011.

McLaren Health Care Corporation (MI) signs a $3 million EHR contract with Allscripts for its 150 employed physicians. Initiate Systems will build McLaren an enterprise MPI across its multiple systems and databases, which includes McKesson’s practice management system.

Associated Cardiovascular Consultants (NJ) selects Sage Intergy, Sage Intergy EHR, Practice Analytics, and Practice Portal for its 38-physician  practice. Sage Healthcare, by the way, has its own channel on YouTube, which includes a number of customer interviews, including one with Associated Cardiovascular’s executive administrator.

CliniComp wins another deal with the VA, its third in the last four months. The New York/New Jersey Veteran’s Healthcare Network will install CliniComp’s Essentris ED and Essentris Critical Care solutions.

Former IDX exec Wayne Koch is named VP of physician services for Apollo Health Street.

The Valley Hospital (NJ) adds Summit Healthcare’s Scripting Toolkit to integrate with Valley Hospital’s MEDITECH platform.

memorial hospital

Wellsoft shares word that the ED docs at Memorial Hospital (PA) are successfully using Dragon Medical to navigate and dictate within the Wellsoft EDIS.

As mandated by the HITECH Act, HHS posts a list of 36 reported health information breaches from private medical practices, hospitals, health systems, and public agencies. Most of the breaches were the result of theft or loss of a computer/drive/backup or other storage media. The breach affecting the most people involved the theft of hard drives from BCBS of Tennessee. The potential number of individuals affected: 500,000.

Here’s your HIMSS tip of the day: I see that Medi-Span is giving away a couple of trips to the Indianapolis 500. It’s labeled a “luxury trip package” but that’s still not much of a draw for me. I will forego entering Medi-Span’s contest and thus improve the odds for real fans. Of course, I expect you race car fans to return the favor when it comes the drawings for a nook eBook Reader (Dialog Medical) or Amazon Kindle (Brocade).

inga

E-mail Inga.



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Currently there are "8 comments" on this Article:

  1. FYI – as long as we are reporting the Breach announcement from HHS:

    North Carolina Healthcare Information and Communication Alliance (NCHICA) Privacy and Security Officials Workgroup has published the HITECH Act Breach Notification Risk Assessment Tool. They developed the tool in response to the DHHS Breach Notification for Unsecured Protected Health Information Interim Final Rule. The main objective of the tool is to provide “covered entities” a consistent approach in performing a risk assessment to determine if the breach notifications are required to be implemented as a result of a possible breach of unsecured Protected Health Information. In addition to the risk assessment, a flow chart has been included that addresses the requirements of both the NC Identity Theft Protection Act and the DHHS Breach Notification Interim Final Rule (see below). To access the tool, click on the URL in the “What’s New” section on the NCHICA home page at http://www.nchica.org.

  2. Perhaps others have found a solution – any thoughts about being able to opt out of the marketing blitz in the run up to HIMSS. I have asked for three years to exclude my contact info, to no avail. Maybe others find it a benefit but getting 290 emails (so far) just clogs my Inbox. I wouldn’t mind paying more for the conference to offset HIMSS’ loss of revenue.

  3. “Epic’s Carl Dvorak was quoted as saying regulation wouldn’t necessarily ensure safer products or encourage innovation, while Cerner says it supports making voluntary safety reports mandatory because it’s “the right thing to do.””

    I’d be interested in seeing a poll on whether the people on here feel that regulations would help promote safer products.

    For that matter it would also be interesting to know whether folks think that physicians are going to get in the same type of trouble regular consumers have with a prequalification for EMR loans.

    Ah yes, before I forget we all feel quite honored to get to talk directly to the CEO of such a vast organization!

  4. You say, “Epic’s Carl Dvorak was quoted as saying regulation wouldn’t necessarily ensure safer products or encourage innovation.”

    Carl actually said, (via HuffPo), “(Regulation) might actually limit innovation and responsiveness when it is needed most.”

    The implications of the two sentences are very different.

  5. The LSU announcement – the client is the Shrevepoint version of the medical school – there is also the New Orleans located school too. Just like the state it resides in – a little confusing on purpose

  6. RE: FDA is “moving closer” to regulating EMRs

    I wonder if David Blumenthal will discuss the demise of CCHIT at the CCHIT Town Hall Meeting at HIMSS10. It is encouraging that Cerner has stepped up to the plate and will voluntarily submit its products for testing because “it’s the right thing to do.” How many other HIMSS EHRVA vendors are willing to do the same in the name of Patient Safety?

    The vendors should voluntarily report any flaws as required. If not, the FDA will test and find the many ways these devices can harm a patient. Then CCHIT’s bogus “certification” lab will be exposed for what it was always meant to be: an organization created by HIMSS to drive up stocks for HIMSS’ EHRVA by rubber stamping its vendors products.

    Patient Safety was never on the table! Senator Charles Grassley should push for a Congressional Hearing. Then HIMSS’ dirty little secrets will come tumbling out.

    The tax payers have been duped!

  7. Cerner is feeling the heat in a hot kitchen. They need to be good citizens now to ward off accusations of criminal conduct.

    Its HIT EMRs and CPOEs are listed on the FDA website as having caused at least 3 of the deaths referred to in the Huff Post report.

  8. Too late on the FDA regulating EMR’s as medical devices. They already have that authority. They testified today at the HIT policy committee/certification work group meeting. According to their representative, they choose not to enforce it.

    Whether we agree if he’s right right or wrong, if a device is causes the death of a patient because it malfunctions, it should be regulated. Here’s the rub, if the FDA regulates and an adverse event happens…and it’s not the EMR’s fault…the doc is on liable for incorrectly using the device and causing harm. Just like any other regulated medical device. See you in court, doc!







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