News 8/24/11

Top News

8-23-2011 9-36-35 PM

HHS announces its Bundled Payments for Care Improvement initiative, a new CMS program that allows hospitals, physicians, and other clinicians to bill their services as a single package instead of as separate items, giving them incentive to manage care better. Applicants can share in the savings over traditional fee-for-service costs, defining their episode of care as one of four models: hospital stay only, hospital stay plus post-acute care, post-acute care only, or a single all-encompassing bundled payment.


Reader Comments

image From BubbasChili: “Re: healthcare reform. I have the answer – legislatively re-categorize insurance companies to non-profit status and require that profits over a given amount be distributed back to consumers. I would also push tort reform, but my first idea is the fix. Just my two cents.” Maybe that requirement should be applied to non-profit hospitals first.

8-23-2011 8-12-03 PM

image From GladItsNotMe: “Re: Lehigh Valley, PA. Has started the evaluation process to replace the old Carecast system. Rumor has it being replaced by that little ol’ vendor out of Madison, WI.” I was too busy at work today to ask Harry Lukens, so I’ll leave this as unverified for now.

8-23-2011 9-38-37 PM

image From PHEye: “Re: CDC’s Public Health Informatics conference in Atlanta. A speaker complained that HIStalk doesn’t cover public health.” I sometimes touch on public health topics that don’t get much attention otherwise, but those news items aren’t always that interesting to me and probably wouldn’t be to my predominantly hospital-based readers either. And while I appreciate the confidence the unidentified speaker places in a part-time blogger, full-time hospital employee to branch out into an entirely new discipline, I do need to sleep occasionally. I’d be happy to start up a fun, informative public health version of HIStalk as a public service if CDC wants to spend some of its legendary grant money to allow me to quit my day job, but otherwise I don’t have the time to take on new challenges.

8-23-2011 7-24-18 PM

image From Reporting In: “Re: RelayHealth. Here’s Jim Bodenbender’s e-mail announcing that sales SVP Mike Lang has resigned to work for an EHR vendor. Jeff Gartland replaces him.” I’ll mark this as verified since RelayHealth already updated its management page with Jeff as sales SVP.

image From 11YearHITVet: “Re: consulting with less travel. I’m burned out and would like a 50% or less travel schedule. Some of said go into interface work or designing Cerner PowerNotes. Ideas?” I think it depends on how you define “consulting.” Certainly you could do build work remotely, working either for someone else or yourself. Vendors do most of their work of this type offsite given ubiquitous and fast broadband (some of it remotely from Asia, in fact.) But that’s probably not the sexy, high-paying work you’re doing now as the PowerPoint-wielding, suit-wearing expert from afar. If you’re doing general management or operational consulting, it’s really a completely different line of work to do remote technical or functional application support (or to just hire on permanently with a client, for that matter). If  you are willing to make that change and have experience, there’s work out there, especially if you know the hot packages like Epic or Cerner. I’ll let readers chime in since I’ve never been a full-time consultant.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

MedAssets gets approval from its board to repurchase up to $25 million of its stock.

Sales

8-23-2011 3-32-32 PM

Presbyterian Healthcare Services (NM) signs a multi-year agreement with Health Care DataWorks (HCD) for its Enterprise Data Warehouse Appliance.

Geisinger Health System chooses Altosoft Insight for Pathology for real-time clinical and AP lab reporting.

8-23-2011 9-42-17 PM

Montfort Jones Memorial Hospital (MS) selects NextGen’s inpatient clinical and financial systems.


People

CHRISTUS Santa Rosa Health System (TX) hires George Gellert MD for the newly created position of regional medical informatics officer.

8-23-2011 9-00-50 PM

Joyce Hunter, CEO of government healthcare IT consulting firm Vulcan Enterprises, joins HavServe, a volunteerism service for developing countries, as CEO. She has volunteered with a number of healthcare IT organizations, including the local HIMSS chapter, HITSP, Maryland’s CRISP HIE, and Cal eConnect.


Announcements and Implementations

8-23-2011 3-37-30 PM

8-23-2011 3-39-08 PM

Jersey Shore Hospital (PA) and Fulton County Medical Center (PA) team up to implement Meditech EMR. The critical access hospitals expect to save about $300,000 each by sharing hardware at a hosted facility and scheduling training and implementation at the same time.

8-23-2011 3-41-39 PM

Anoto Group announces implementations of its digital pen and paper technology, including Shareable Ink’s implementations with Allscripts, Cerner, Epic, McKesson and Meditech. Other new partnerships directly with Anoto or its resellers include NextGen Healthcare, Intelligent Medical Objects, Waiting Room Solutions, Nightingale Informatix, and Bayscribe.

The Community Health Information Collaborative (CHIC) announces plans to consolidate its operations with Minnesota HIE, resulting in a single state-certified entity named HIE-Bridge.

8-23-2011 3-47-42 PM

Ministry Health Care (WI) will implement EHR Doctors’ Medibridge.net HIE technology to enable the exchange of patient information and provide patients with access to their health information.

8-23-2011 4-04-26 PM

The Electronic Healthcare Network Accreditation Commission (EHNAC) develops an Outsourced Services Accreditation Program for HIE technology service providers. The program will evaluate HIE vendors to verify they meet industry standards of quality for PHI; follow appropriate privacy and security regulations; and meet acceptable standards for technical performance, business processes, and resource management.

8-23-2011 9-44-30 PM

The governor of Guam announces the launch of its first HIE, mentioning that Guam Memorial Hospital will get $5 million in federal incentive money and another $21 million is available for doctors who sign up.


Government and Politics

image UK health secretary Andrew Lansley calls on developers to create applications that relate to one of five healthcare themes: personalization, improved outcomes, autonomy and accountability, improving public health, and improving long-term care. NHS is running a developer’s contest, but offering no prizes or funding. Consumers are also encouraged to submit their favorite health apps (“maps and apps”) or those they’d like to see developed.


Other

8-23-2011 1-55-12 PM

8-23-2011 1-55-56 PM

8-23-2011 1-57-43 PM

image Once again Mr. H was robbed of a spot on this list of the 100 Most Influential People in Healthcare. Representative Paul Ryan tops the list, followed by Vermont Governor Peter Shumlin and President Obama. Donald Berwick, Kathleen Sebelius, and Farzad Mostashardi were included in the top 10, while Judy Faulkner (with an updated head shot) earned the #44 spot.

A watchdog organization finds that only 15 of the largest 100 HIT firms participated in HIT lobbying efforts between October 1, 2010 and March 31, 2011.

8-23-2011 3-52-06 PM

The Department of Homeland Security is soliciting vendors to provide an EHR to store medical data on undocumented residents across 22 immigration detention facilities.

8-23-2011 3-53-58 PM

Memorial Hermann Healthcare System (TX) launches Houston’s first HIE. Patients must opt in, with 96% of those that have been asked so far saying yes.

image Weird News Andy says he can’t top the quote in this article: “a felony case of stupidity.” A workers’ compensation billing company puts detailed medical information on 300,000 California residents on a server that it thinks is visible only to its employees. Someone Googling discovers that the entire database is wide open on the Internet. The “felony stupidity” comment was in reference to the fact that the company didn’t password-protect the information and didn’t include the “noindex” HTML meta tag that tells search engines to skip indexing that page.

image A reader sent over a new JAMIA article called Factors Contributing to an Increase in Duplicate Medication Orders After CPOE Implementation. It looked at the impact of implementing Epic’s CPOE in a 400-bed hospital’s adult and cardiac ICUs (Geisinger, I believe). The number of duplicate med warnings quadrupled, which the study found was caused by (a) multiple providers entering orders at the same time; (b) lack of hand-offs; (c) design problems that caused false alarms; (d) poor data display, where providers entered a new order because they didn’t notice an existing one; and (e) poor local design of order sets that contained pre-built duplicates. Providers both pre- and post-study were neutral about the value of duplicate therapy alerts. The study also found that some potentially duplicate orders weren’t flagged, such as duplicates with differing routes of administration and serial orders where the same therapy was ordered at slightly different times. I didn’t see anything surprising here: duplicate warnings are the ‘stupidest’ of the usual medication screening types (drug, dose, allergy, interaction, drug-lab, drug-disease, etc.) and usually make up at least half of the useless warnings that providers see. There’s no really smart way to tell whether two PRN meds that both contain acetaminophen will be a problem – if the patient gets one or the other but not both, then there’s really no duplication (but that can’t be determined until administration time, not when the order is entered).  Smarter systems ignore route differences (IV vs. topical gentamicin) and maybe skip PRN duplicates and those from the same order set completely, but otherwise it’s almost impossible to separate intentional duplication vs. unintentional. Give the high percentage of provider overrides, one might postulate that duplicate warnings do more harm than good, masking significant problems of other types with their sheer volume and rarely resulting in DC’ing one of the alleged duplicates. I’m not optimistic that it’s a solvable problem – you won’t get a useful answer if you ask providers to sketch out a universal decision tree of when to trigger a duplicate alert, so you can’t expect the computer to improve a process that can’t really be designed. Turning duplicate alerts off completely might be the best strategy.

8-23-2011 8-40-16 PM

image Seattle startup Medify, staffed with former employees of airfare prediction company Farecast, is creating a searchable consumer database of vetted research study information covering side effects, treatments, and symptoms with social networking connections to similar patients. I struck out on my first search when it didn’t recognize “congestive heart failure” as a medical term, but got a lot of information on “cellulitis” (which talked a lot about maggot therapy for debridement). It’s aimed at consumers, but it looks to me like clinicians would find it useful to get current thought on treatments (not to mention that consumers aren’t going to pay out of their own pockets, but the usual pharma/insurance companies might if it could improve outcomes or cost). Besides, a lot of what it returns is barely understandable even to providers, like when I clicked “clindamycin” for cellulitis and got, “A semisynthetic broad spectrum antibiotic produced by chemical modification of the parent compound lincomycin. Clindamycin dissociates peptidyl-tRNA
from the bacterial ribosome, thereby disrupting bacterial protein synthesis. (NCI04)” Not exactly a compelling Facebook post like the maggots would have been.

image The Washington Post highlights an interesting conflict: Medicaid is trying to reduce overuse of EDs as free doctors’ offices to save taxpayer dollars, but much of the potential savings isn’t being realized because hospitals are aggressively marketing their EDs for routine care, hoping to pump up profitable admissions. A quote from South Carolina’s Medicaid director: “When you are advertising on billboards that your ER wait time is three minutes, you are not advertising to stroke and heart attack victims.” For-profits HCA (which runs wait time billboards) and Tenet (which runs billboards and also accepts online ED appointments) claim they haven’t seen a significant increase in Medicaid visits.

Hospitals in Wales are testing university-developed software that can reduce wait times and analyze the cost-effectiveness of medical treatments. It uses simulation and queuing theory, which the project’s director likens to a 1990s computer game called Theme Hospital that allows what-if analysis.

8-23-2011 9-29-14 PM

image Here’s the kind of lawsuit lunacy that forces hospitals to hire expensive lawyers. A (barely literate) former patient claims a hospital surgeon, while removing his tonsils, implanted a GPS tracker into his armpit.


Sponsor Updates

  • Shareable Ink will participate in the Innovation Booth at next week’s Allscripts user group meeting, ACE. The company also gets a mention in a Wall Street Journal article discussing Nashville’s growing  healthcare industry. 
  • Holon introduces Pharmacy Workflow Manager, which allow hospitals and IDNs with multiple locations to manage and report workload and productivity.
  • GE Healthcare launches Centricity Business 5.0.
  • TeleTracking announces the release of RTLS TempTracking.
  • CynergisTek announces the release of its Meaningful Use Security Program to assesses compliance with security regs and reduces risk in preparation for MU attestation.
  • Modern Healthcare’s 2011 Top 100 Best Places to Work in Healthcare includes Aspen Advisors, Encore Health Resources, Enterprise Software Deployment (ESD), Hayes Management Consulting, Iatric Systems, Impact Advisors, maxIT Healthcare, and The Advisory Board Company. Rankings will be revealed in October.
  • Sentry Data Systems will attend Health Connect Partners Hospital Pharmacy Conference next month in Phoenix.
  • Orion Health is hosting a free webinar on August 31 entitled Integrating HIE into Clinical Workflow.
  • e-MDs launches e-MDs Rounds for the iPhone, giving doctors access to their EHR data via their mobile device.
  • Jason Colquitt, Greenway Medical’s director of research services, is elected to a two-year term on the HIMSS EHR Association’s executive committee.
  • Perceptive Software hosts a job fair this week at its Shawnee, KS headquarters. The company is seeking to hire more than 60 people in R&D, sales, and professional and technical services. Also announced: the company’s ImageNow product has earned Modular HER certification for both inpatient and ambulatory.
  • Informatics Corporation of America and the Health Information Exchange of Montana announce that as of June 6, 2011, three hospitals and one community health center are connected using ICA’s CareAlign HIE solution.
  • ZirMed earns its sixth consecutive spot on Inc magazine’s annual ranking of the nation’s fastest-growing private companies.

Contacts

Mr. H, Inga, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg.

Curbside Consult with Dr. Jayne 8/22/11

As most of us know, it doesn’t matter how much time you spend doing e-mail. It’s impossible to stay ahead. Sometimes I e-mail myself articles that I would like to mention. Before I have a chance to get my thoughts on paper, they scroll up, up, and away as the inbox gets larger and larger.

(Speaking of, have you ever tried to change the way you work your e-mail, say from top to bottom when you’re used to working bottom to top? I recently had this experience, and for whatever reason, it was extremely difficult. Talk about assaults on muscle memory! It’s finally back the way I like it, but it was a painful experiment that although designed to yield efficiency, just made me crazy.)

As I did some e-mail cleanup during a bit of unexpected free time (thank you, cancelled conference call!) I found an e-mail that reminded me to look at a journal article: Longer Lengths of Stay and Higher Risk of Mortality among Inpatients of Physicians with More Years in Practice.  The study looks at patients hospitalized during a two year period (2002-2004, coinciding with the residency training calendar on a July-June basis) on the teaching service.

For those of you not in hospitals that have residency programs, the teaching service is staffed by interns and residents under the supervision of an attending physician. Depending on the structure of the teams, supervision of the trainees varies, but ultimately it’s the attending physician who’s on the line should something go wrong.

There is speculation that patients who are hospitalized in July do worse because of transitions in the trainee pool (I talked about this “July Effect” last month), so I was glad to see this study controlled for the variable of having residents and students involved in care. All of the patients were treated at Montefiore Medical Center in the Bronx. They also controlled for any chance that having a more lengthy physician-patient relationship would influence the outcome by restricting patients to those who had never received care from the attending physician.

The authors looked at four groups of attending physicians: those in practice 1-5, 6-10, 11-20, and >20 years. Although the number of physicians was only 59, they looked at over 6,000 patient admissions. Patient groups were similar in demographics and clinical characteristics.

The study found that physicians in practice more than 20 years had greater mean length of stay numbers and greater mortality rates (both in-hospital and 30-day) than physicians with less than five years in practice. This impacted the sickest patients greater than those with less-complex conditions.

They also found that when the teaching service was less busy, patients stayed the same amount of time regardless of physician age. However when there were more patients to care for, length of stay increased in the longer-practicing group.

The authors conclude, “Inpatient care by physicians with more years in practice is associated with higher risk of mortality. Quality-of-care interventions should be developed to maintain inpatient skills for physicians.”

Well, isn’t that special! Talk about a solution that doesn’t necessarily address root cause.

Quite a few organizations commented on the study, with some citing earlier data showing that more seasoned physicians are less likely to adhere to published guidelines. This strengthens the argument that physicians should have to recertify periodically to prove that they are staying abreast of current standards of care. 

I agree with that. My specialty requires everyone to recertify, but other specialties have allowed older physicians to be “grandfathered” into perpetual certification.

Certification aside, though, I’d like to propose two other areas that need analysis. The first is the fact that the more seasoned physicians have gone through a tremendous amount of change in medicine over the last two decades. There have been drastic changes in the non-clinical work physicians are responsible for (insurance issues, E&M coding, pay for performance, loss of autonomy, economic pressures, etc.) and one of the natural responses to change is to entrench in the past.

The second involves looking at the systems that have proliferated based on the changes above, both operational and technical. There has been a proliferation of operational platforms impacting how clinicians are forced to navigate – everything from the Disney Institute to Six Sigma. Simultaneously, there’s been tremendous pressure to move to electronic systems that range widely in their ease of use, stability, and quality.

I’d like to see similar data where they survey the physicians about their comfort level with not only hospital policies and procedures (including proliferation of care coordinators, discharge specialists, length of stay coordinators, coding coaches, etc.) impacting their care, but also on their comfort level with the systems they use and how well they use them.

Because of the presence of interns and residents, I have a sneaking suspicion that some of the more experienced attendings may not have leveraged technology and the team approach (sometimes perceived as interference) as much as they could have. Old work habits are hard to break, and when you’re used to the lower-ranking physicians doing everything and just co-signing at the end, it’s easy to miss things.

Coupled with a mistrust for technology, it’s even more complex. I suspect newer attendings for whom these systems have always been present would be more likely to be hands-on with the technology rather than passive.

Regardless of the reasons, it’s something that deserves a second look.

E-mail Dr. Jayne.

Monday Morning Update 8/22/11

8-19-2011 9-46-20 PM

8-19-2011 9-42-41 PM

From Hot Off the Press: “Re: Cal eConnect. President and CEO Carladenise Edwards PhD steps down.” HOTP forwarded her e-mail from late Friday afternoon announcing her transition to senior advisor of the HIE organization due to “personal reasons.” Cal eConnect was created when California’s HHS department, overseer of $39 million in federal HIE grant money, decided to form a new statewide oversight organization instead of supporting CalRHIO, effectively shutting that organization down in January 2010. TechLeader obtained information suggesting that earlier last week, Cal eConnect suspended its RFP for a provider directory service, with no bidder selected.

8-20-2011 5-26-00 PM

From THB: “Re: tax-exempt hospitals. A potential trend?” Three non-profit Chicago area hospitals express shock that the Illinois Department of Revenue has denied their tax-exempt status requests, ruling that they aren’t owned by charitable organizations and aren’t being used for primarily charitable purposes and therefore must pay property taxes like any other business. The state said the hospitals didn’t list uncompensated care on their requests, but did in their own records: Prentice Women’s at Northwestern (1.85% – pictured above), Edward (1.04%), and Decatur Memorial (0.96%). The state says it won’t set a minimum charity percentage, although one legislator is sponsoring a bill that would require at least 3.5% of total revenue. Just for fun, I checked the IRS forms of Edward Hospital: it made a profit of $25 million in the most recent year, paid the CEO $1.6 million, and claimed it provided $45 million in charity care.

From The PACS Designer: “Re: IBM’s 100th anniversary. Most all of us have encountered business relationships with IBM in our work careers. TPD first learned about IBM solutions in the early 1960s while getting educated to be an electronics engineer by being trained on the use of an IBM vacuum tube computer. Later in my electronics career, I worked with IBM to interface the IBM Shark information storage system to a PACS to create one of the first central archives for all hospital information including imaging files.  InformationWeek recently published a video history of IBM’s 100 years.”

Thanks to a few of my overachieving sponsors who have already swapped out their animated ads with a static replacement, well in advance of the January 1 deadline I set to allow them plenty of time. I appreciate it, as do those many readers who requested that change.

8-20-2011 3-56-26 PM

Over 60% of respondents agree with the recommendation of Congresswoman Renee Ellmers that HHS study EMR effectiveness and impact on patient safety. New poll to your right: does Epic CEO Judy Faulkner have too much influence on federal government healthcare IT decisions?

Listening (and watching): reader-recommended Live from Daryl’s House, a fascinating Internet program created by (and paid for by) the first half of Hall and Oates. I hated the 80s poofy-haired, “blue-eyed soul” dreck they did and was kind of hoping he’d been reduced to unpaid gigging at the Paducah Holiday Inn, but I now want to be Daryl Hall: inviting all kinds of big music names to jam with him in a barn-like room of his $16 million spread, drinking wine, bringing in guest chefs to cook for them, having scintillating dinner conversations, and recording the whole thing as a homebrew reality show. The audio and video quality are amazing, the guests compelling. My favorites so far have been Grace Potter and the Nocturnals and Krieger / Manzarek of The Doors, with whom Hall does just fine vocal work on my favorite Doors tune, The Crystal Ship. He’s 64, rich, and living large, just playing his music to an Internet audience. I’ll grumblingly admit that even the versions of Hall and Oates tunes he and his guests covered (like the insipid Sara Smile) sound amazing and fresh. I wish I could be that cool.

I swear that Vince Ciotti is digging deeper into company histories with every new HIStory chapter, finding veterans willing to share their previously untold stories. This time he  covers a company I don’t remember: Sentry Data. Upcoming are these vendors: AR/Mediquest, JSData, and Gerber-Alley, so if you have war stories to tell about them, Vince is your guy.

Urology EHR vendor meridianEMR files a lawsuit and gets a restraining order against competitor Intuitive Medical Software (UroChart), claiming UroChart cloned one of its servers and thereby gained illegal access to meridianEMR’s product and the protected health information stored by its clients.

8-19-2011 9-50-20 PM

The weekly employee e-mail from Kaiser honcho George Halvorson talks up their first iPhone app, KP Locator, which he says is “the next connectivity path on a journey that is turning into a superhighway of connectivity over time.” He says it’s the first of many that will be built and invites employees to send him ideas for the next round.

An article in Silicon Valley / San Jose Business Journal details how much local hospitals are spending on EMRs. Factoids: (a) 403-bed Mills-Peninsula Hospital spent $50-75 million; (b) six Daughters of Charity hospitals spent a total of $80-90 million; (c) Stanford says it’s spending 30% of its total available capital each year to implement EMRs; (d) Stanford also spent $13 million to hire a 100-member temporary go-live team for three weeks, which must be a misprint or an incomplete description since that’s over $800 per hour;  (e) O’Connor Hospital spent $2-3 million on EMR training; (f) Mills-Peninsula expects to spend 2.5% of the hospital’s entire budget each year in perpetuity for EMR maintenance.

8-19-2011 10-05-29 PM

Beth Israel Deaconess reportedly offers its CEO job to Kevin Tabb, chief medical officer at Stanford Hospitals and Clinics, who would replace the ousted Paul Levy. He’s an internist, but went into healthcare IT straight out of residency as a clinical informatics analyst for iKnowMed, a data director for MedicaLogic, president of clinical data services for GE Healthcare, and then chief quality officer / CMIO for Stanford. Sounds like he would be a geeky kindred spirit for CIO John Halamka there.

8-19-2011 10-11-20 PM

Asante Health System (OR) chooses Epic, saying “only one vendor had an integrated solution for hospitals and physician offices, and that was Epic.” They also added that Epic puts 47% of earnings back into R&D and has less than 2% of its workforce involved in sales and marketing.

Thirteen Danish hospitals announce plans to migrate their 25,000 employees from unnamed proprietary office software (care to take a guess?) to the open source LibreOffice, a fork of OpenOffice.org.

8-20-2011 4-31-13 PM

A computer professor in England enlists the help of his colleagues to create a computer game to help his four-year-old daughter, who has cystic fibrosis. She can control on-screen graphics by breathing into a PEP mask, which forces her airways open, an otherwise monotonous exercise that kids don’t enjoy. Her doctor can review her game results to determine how her lungs are doing. The group hopes to have the game tested and available to the public within a year.

8-20-2011 4-38-41 PM

Former Allscripts COO Ben Bulkley is running Fluidnet, a Massachusetts-based IV infusion control system vendor that just raised $25 million in investment capital.

HP wants out of the consumer computer business, but its systems work isn’t such a hit in Ohio either, where the Medicaid Information Technology System that went live on August 2 is inappropriately denying payments to providers, improperly kicking patients off assistance programs, and causing prescriptions to go unfilled by rejecting the Medicaid bills from pharmacies. Rep. Dennis Kucinich will meet with CMS administrator Don Berwick on Tuesday.


Regulation of EMRs by FDA
By Tim Gee

In the HIMSS top nine trends to watch in health IT, they missed a big one: the regulation of EMRs and other applications by the FDA, and potentially transforming providers into medical device manufacturers.

Between the final MDDS rule (which called out hospitals as potential regulated medical device manufacturers) and public testimony by Jeff Shuren, director of CDRH at FDA that the FDA intends to regulate at least some EMR software, healthcare IT is going to be coming to grips with FDA regulations for some time to come.

How many hospitals have written software to acquire data from medical devices? I’d guess over 100. I’ve heard estimates from sources that FDA expects to be regulating thousands of new manufacturers in the near term.

Since the final MDDS rule was published, four providers have registered with FDA as medical device manufacturers and listed their MDDS products with FDA. The providers are Partners, Gundersen Lutheran, Intermountain Health, and the Alaska Native Tribal Health Consortium.

And when FDA regulates portions of EMRs (they’ve set their sights on decision support systems first), providers who modify their EMR applications may be transformed into medical device manufacturers and become regulated, too. How many early adopter hospitals have have written their own DSS from scratch? They, too are likely to become regulated medical device manufacturers.

The MDDS rule was the shot across the bow. Expect a draft guidance document from FDA on regulating EMRs late this year. Yes, FDA will go slow, but responding will be like turning a battleship – it will take a while and require substantial effort in some cases.
In the next two or three years, I’ll bet most hospitals will be looking to hire regulatory affairs / quality assurance directors, and many hospitals may be rethinking their wholesale modification of HIT apps they purchase, not to mention foregoing rolling their own apps.

E-mail Mr. H.

Time Capsule: Consider Funding Health IT Projects Like Bill Gates Would

I wrote weekly editorials for a boutique industry newsletter for several years, anxious for both audience and income. I learned a lot about coming up with ideas for the weekly grind, trying to be simultaneously opinionated and entertaining in a few hundred words, and not sleeping much because I was working all the time. They’re fun to read as a look back at what was important then (and often still important now).

I wrote this piece in June 2006.

Consider Funding Health IT Projects Like Bill Gates Would
by Mr. HIStalk

It’s no longer news when a big, non-profit integrated delivery network pays a CEO $1 million or a CIO makes $300K for running a small department. We’ve come a long way since the days when ministering to the sick was a calling, where selfless caregivers toiled for a subsistence wage in service to mankind. And why not, since a big IDN can make hundreds of millions of dollars in profit (sorry, “surplus”) in a good year? Once nuns got replaced by MBAs, hospitals became a big business, feeling quite unlike charities to those working inside them. The only surprise in the IRS’s questioning of whether hospitals deserve tax-exempt status is that it took them so long.

VP panic ensues when the local newspaper prints executive salaries, fiscal year results, or drawings of the latest vanity construction project. Nurses may be de-motivated. Unions might be called in. A bitter janitor might key all the luxury cars in reserved spots. Beaten-down doctors may get even crankier when they find out that even bottom-feeding HR and marketing VPs out-earn them.

I thought of this when I read that Bill Gates and Warren Buffet will turn over their billions to serve those in need. I’ve worked in hospitals and IDNs for many years. Are we good stewards of charitable dollars, efficiently funneling them directly to those in need with minimal administrative overhead and waste? That’s how you evaluate a charity, and on that basis, IDNs don’t seem to compete very well. We’re no Salvation Army, with tiny salaries and a focused mission.

Still, another headline gave me an idea. Studies are proving what we all knew: RHIOs can’t survive without charity. If RHIOs provide benefits to patients, yet offer no hope of financial self-sufficiency, then maybe that’s a good and direct use of charitable dollars. Put a few million long-term dollars into some well-organized RHIOs and see what happens.

I like this because Gates’s charity is notoriously efficient. You compete with other causes under rigorous conditions on how well your project will benefit society. RHIOs would have to prove themselves worthy of funding, which would be an interesting exercise in itself given their sketchy “let’s put on a show” origins.

What other health care IT projects deserve charitable consideration? I’d vote for a center for usability research to make health care software more user-friendly and less training-intensive. I like the idea of a free clearinghouse for clinical rules, knowledge, and content to be shared by non-profit hospitals. Maybe we need a patient safety organization just for IT, watching out for problems caused by poorly-designed software and medical technology. Perhaps a non-profit medical informatics consulting organization could help hospitals with an occasional need for that expertise..

If you’re involved in hospital IT, my advice is to review your projects like the Gates Foundation would. Are they ingenious, cost-effective, highly beneficial to patients, and highly likely to succeed? If so, put your resources into those.

In the meantime, here’s my challenge to you. Come up with a list of health care IT projects that are noble causes, benefiting a large population in a way that the free market and the government haven’t. What IT-related work would be ingenious, cost-effective, highly beneficial, and highly deliverable enough to pass scrutiny from the Gates Foundation? Send them my way and maybe we’ll talk about them in a future article.

News 8/19/11

Top News

8-18-2011 7-36-19 PM

image General Dynamics will acquire federal healthcare software vendor Vangent for $960 million, the company announced this week. Says the General Dynamics chairman and CEO, “Vangent is a well-regarded, fast-growing company that will add significant depth and breadth to General Dynamics’ healthcare IT organization, creating a Tier 1-level healthcare IT business unit with the scope and scale to compete in markets that are receiving high priority in current funding and entitlement-reform initiatives” The Arlington, VA-based Vangent, which has 7,500 employees, does work for HHS and the military. It developed the Army’s MC4 battlefield EMR. Kerry Weems, SVP and GM of Vangent’s Health Solutions business, joined the company in 2009 when he left his government position as head of CMS. He was also vice chairman of the American Health Information Community.


Reader Comments

8-18-2011 6-34-36 PM 8-18-2011 6-35-25 PM

image From Watchdog: “Re: HIMSS. Pictures of its new headquarters in the financial district of Chicago. They also hired Steve Rosenfield as executive vice president / managing director of HIMSS Media, a new position and department, and seek an associate manager of social media to improve the society’s ‘positive visibility.’ All that was required is an Associate’s Degree.” Steve doesn’t appear to have a degree, but did write co-write this book documenting the late 70s history of an influential Long Island club that includes photos and an audio CD of the folks who performed there (Springsteen, Aerosmith, Rick Derringer, Stanley Clarke, etc.)

8-18-2011 7-21-45 PM

image From One Of Their Hospitals: “Re: MDG Medical. The support numbers are no longer in service.” I ran this reader’s rumor last week, in which he said his hospital’s pharmacy got word from the pharmacy dispensing automation vendor that they would close their doors last Friday. I said I wouldn’t name them until I checked to see if the phones were disconnected. Sure enough, the support number and PBX option now give a fast busy. The Israel-based company opened an office in Beachwood, OH in 2001 and moved its corporate headquarters to Aurora, OH in 2010. It claims to have 150 hospital customers and was announcing expansion plans as recently as October. I can’t verify anything other than that their support numbers aren’t working and they didn’t respond to my earlier e-mail asking about the rumor.

image From Wildcat Well: “Re: RECs. There have been claims that healthcare IT will be the primary sector for job creation. Does it count when a REC receives funds from ONC, the REC coordinator contracts for systems integration work with ‘local’ vendors, and the jobs are filled through the overseas facilities of those vendors? We may just be stupid enough to deserve the mess we are in.”

image From Hate Manual Entry: “Re: Sage Healthcare. Rumor is they bought a SaaS-based HER from a recently bankrupted company. Any others hearing the same?” We asked Sage, which said that for competitive reasons, they don’t comment on acquisitions or technologies that may or may not be under consideration.

8-18-2011 7-46-56 PM

image From Laura: “Re: Joplin. I’m sure you’ve seen that Mercy has announced plans to rebuild in Joplin. They have kept employees on the payroll since the May tornado and raised $500 million in a co-worker fund to help with expenses.” The 28-hospital Mercy (formerly called Sisters of Mercy) will spend $950 million to build a new 327-bed hospital in Joplin. They’re an Epic shop, I believe.


HIStalk Announcements and Requests

image Check out the good stuff on HIStalk Practice: Don Michaels of Hayes Management Consulting and the Harvard School of Public Health weighs in on ACOs and the results of CMS’s demonstration project. Julie McGovern of Practice Wise offers recommendations for providers upgrading their software. Rob Culbert of Culbert Healthcare Solutions suggests key performance indicators to assess a practice’s financial health. CMS provides a breakdown of EMR Meaningful Use payments by specialty and provider type. The GAO advises CMS on how to improve physician quality reporting. I’m a simple gal with simple needs and I’ll be simply thrilled if you sign up for e-mail updates while visiting HIStalk Practice.

On the Job Board: Project Manager I, Epic and Cerner Consultants, Senior Enterprise Sales Executive.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

8-18-2011 9-58-10 AM

drchrono closes an additional $650K in seed funding and announces the release of OnPatient, a free patient check-in app for the iPad.

Deloitte acquires the assets of Intrasphere Technologies, a New Jersey drug safety and regulatory consulting company that also offers R&D informatics software for registering clinical trials.

image HP announces a restructuring that includes ceasing production of tablet computers and smart phones, trying to sell its PC business, and spending $10 billion to acquire British search technology vendor Autonomy at a 64% premium to its share price. The HP Touchpad has barely been on the market for a month. The announcement probably signals the inglorious end of Palm, which HP bought last year for $1.8 billion before phasing out the brand.


Sales

8-18-2011 12-25-35 PM

The University of Chicago Medical Center will implement Omnicell’s Inventory Management Carousels with WorkflowRx software for inventory management and Omincell’s automated dispending system.

Imprivata announces that 12 Siemens customers have chosen its OneSign single sign-on.

8-18-2011 6-22-37 PM

Stamford Hospital (CT) will implement SmartRoom technology in all of its patient rooms, which provides real-time patient and RTLS information on an in-room monitor and provides touch-screen documentation capability. SmartRoom was developed by UPMC, which owns the company.  

8-18-2011 9-03-07 PM

Evergreen Healthcare (WA) chooses Cerner clinical systems.


People

8-18-2011 8-02-38 PM 8-18-2011 8-03-49 PM

Healthcare software vendor Net.Orange names Rob Beardall MD, MPH as EVP/Chief Medical Officer and Troy Roth as SVP of solutions strategy. They come from Health Synectics LTD and MedAssets, respectively.

8-18-2011 8-10-23 PM

Paula Guy, CEO of Georgia Partnership for TeleHealth, joins the board of the Georgia Health Information Exchange.


Announcements and Implementations

Arkansas critical care hospitals Piggot Community Hospital, DeWitt Hospital, Delta Memorial Hospital, and Chicot Memorial Medical Center select Healthland.

Nine hospital systems in Western Pennsylvania partner to create the ClincalConnect HIE. dbMotion will supply the infrastructure for the $4 million project.

8-18-2011 6-26-32 PM

The radiology department of University of Utah Health Care reports that its use of artificial intelligence resource management software from Allocade reduced overtime cost by 90% and overall FTE expenses by 10-15%.

8-18-2011 8-35-57 PM

Miami-based EMR vendor CareCloud says it has tripled headcount in the past year to 80 and will bring on another 30 employees by the end of the year.


Government and Politics

The VA issues an RFI for cloud-based collaboration tools for its entire workforce. They plan to pilot document sharing and calendar applications with 5,000 physicians, potentially replacing Outlook and Exchange, SharePoint, and Jive Software for all of their employees if the pilot is successful.

Other

image I got an earful from my doctor and his office manager today about their “horrible” EMR. Since purchasing it a year and a half ago, they’ve suffered through performance issues, upgrades problems, inadequate templates, and many unexpected expenses. The Meaningful Use money, which they’ll receive this month, covers the EMR’s cost but not the $10K per year for maintenance. The doctor blames the vendor, which has been around for less than five years, for releasing an immature product. I checked their Web site and it looks like the latest and greatest. I wonder how often providers opt for bleeding edge, only to later regret not buying the tried and true option?

Here’s a video showing the Texas Health Resources group that climbed Mount Kilimanjaro (including Ed Marx) opening a medical clinic in a Tanzanian village a few weeks ago.

image A drug company’s laid-off IT tech pleads guilty to extracting his revenge by wiping out most of the company’s electronic systems while he still had access as a contractor. The drug company lost e-mail, inventory systems, and payroll capabilities, crippling it for several days at an estimated cost of $800K. The tech faces 10 years in prison.

image The FBI subpoenas Parkland Memorial Hospital (TX) and its IT department, seeking records related to a former Dallas County commissioner and a telecommunications system business owned by a close friend. According to the Department of Justice, the investigation involves “allegations of public corruption, tax evasion, and money laundering.” The telecommunications company got $3 million worth of consulting work from Parkland and UT Southwestern Medical Center. Another of its customers, the local toll authority, paid $47,500 for a no-bid consulting report that basically said “your equipment needs to be replaced” and included graphics lifted directly from another company’s 12-year-old product manual.

8-18-2011 8-23-09 PM

image In Ireland, an interim examiner is appointed to review three hospital software vendors that have claimed insolvency, putting the electronic records of 10 million patients at risk. The companies operate under the name IMS Maxims.

image French software vendor Atos Healthcare, whose software is used in England to evaluate disability claimants, investigates two employees (one of them a nurse) for their Facebook comments about those claimants, which they characterized as “down and outs” and “parasitic wankers.”


Sponsor Updates

  • Intelligent Medical Objects and dbMotion will participate in the Allscripts Client Experience next week.
  • MEDSEEK’s eConnect HIE technology successfully connects the WNC Data Link (NC) HIE to the VA’s VistA.
  • UCare selects RelayHealth’s Payer Connectivity Services (PCS) for its 230,000+ members.
  • API Healthcare will exhibit at the ASHHRA annual conference in Phoenix next month.
  • Healthcare Innovative Solutions VP Daniela Mahoney, RN, will present Best Practices in CPOE Deployment Strategies, and Physician Resistance, Adoption and Value Proposition at the Kansas Hospital Association: Meaningful Use Summit, and Executing Key Plays: How Team Members Must Adapt to Succeed at SC Hospital Association the TAP Conference.
  • TeleTracking Technologies is offering a free Patient Flow symposium in Raleigh, NC next month.
  • Nuance Communications unveils Dragon Medical Practice Edition, which targets the needs of physicians in practices smaller than 25 providers.
  • OptumInsight’s Axolotl EMR Lite, version 9.2 receives ONC-ATCB certification as a complete ambulatory EHR.
  • A healthcare claims review company implements Symantec’s PGP Whole Disk Encryption to meet HIPAA requirements, claiming a one-month payback period after switching from free encryption software that was killing employee productivity.


EPtalk by Dr. Jayne

I returned home from my most recent sojourn to find the only thing I hate worse than filing my taxes or a root canal — a re-credentialing packet for my hospital privileges. Despite our health system’s large IT department and our belief that we are high tech, the credentialing process is decidedly low tech.

When I was a practicing physician, my practice manager took care of the application and applied sticky flags to areas that needed review or my signature. But now that I’ve crossed to the dark side of information technology, there’s no one in my organizational tree who has any idea how to do these, so I have the pleasure. I think next year I might just ask my former staffer if she’d be willing to do it for cash (as an independent contractor, of course — I’m not about to run afoul of the IRS.)

Under the 26-page “standard” credentialing form was an additional 22 pages of forms to be completed. They had been photocopied so many times they were practically illegible. Lurking at the bottom of the stack were several nearly identical sets of privilege forms for the different hospitals at which I am on staff, one for each facility (heaven forbid they share information from a central repository or from the master application itself.)

I find it slightly humorous that I still hold privileges for OB labor and delivery as well as operative circumcision despite having not performed either procedure in quite some time. Oh yes, and I can also pierce the earlobes of inpatients if I so choose.

In addition, they want a copy of my Curriculum Vitae and documentation of my Continuing Medical Education hours, which along with everything else has to be returned on paper and by mail. Seriously. Everything else we do in the hospital is electronic – CPOE, patient recordkeeping, even patient meal selections done on a touch-screen at the bedside. Except this.

When it comes to the concept of ensuring that physicians have accurate and up-to-date data before approving them to start or continue seeing patients at a facility, we’ve gone back to 1956. (Actually, 1956 was probably easier – you could most likely have just hung your diploma on the wall and started seeing people.)

If this would have been an online process, I’d have knocked it out right away while lounging on the sofa with some quality Netflix and recuperating from my travels. But instead, it goes on the dreaded ‘pile’ somewhere between the bill from the local lawn care guy and the student loan payment coupon, both paper-based businesses.

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Turning to health IT news, legislators on the House Energy and Commerce Committee have asked the Government Accountability Office to review Federal Communications Commission efforts to ensure the safety of wireless medical devices. Their request featured discussion of the recent demo where an insulin pump was hacked and hijacked. As I was reading this piece, I envisioned a flashing “As Seen On HIStalk” seal of approval.

Finally, a reader question. It’s been a long time since we have had one and I do enjoy them (hint, hint).


Dear Dr. Jayne,

Is the new Chest-Compression-Only method of CPR taking hold, or is there some resistance to it? I still see classes offered in the older method and have to wonder… why? What do you think?

Breathless but Hearty

Dear Hearty Reader,

I think overall, more data is needed. When I completed my certifications for CPR and advanced life support (both cardiac and trauma) as well as pediatric life support a few months ago, traditional CPR was required. The American Red Cross issued a statement last year about compression-only CPR, stating:

“…Compression-Only CPR until an AED [Automated Extermal Defibrillator] is available is an acceptable alternative for those who are unwilling, unable, or not trained to perform CPR.”

I tend to agree with them. The idea of CPR is that you want to prevent brain death, and unless you’re oxygenating the blood by getting air into the lungs then circulating it with compressions, you’re not going to be as successful if oxygen levels remain low.

On the other hand, if it’s the difference between CPR not being done because a bystander isn’t sure how to do it correctly or is worried about communicable diseases or some of the more unpleasant side effects of bystander CPR, then I think compressions alone are better than nothing.

The American Heart Association offers a trademarked “Hands-Only CPR” method that’s demonstrated on their website. I like their bullet point: “Don’t be afraid. Your actions can only help.” Regardless, knowing the legal world, I offer this advice — if you’re trained in traditional CPR and have no other reason not to do it, traditional CPR should be your first choice. I’d hate to get into a “standard of care” discussion on this one.

Jayne

Have a question about LOINC codes, the Russell Viper Venom time assay, or whether snakebite extraction kits really work? E-mail me.




Contacts

Mr. H, Inga, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg.

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