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June 6, 2013 News 14 Comments

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6-6-2013 10-40-50 PM

The former chief information security officer of the VA says the department’s networks and databases were hacked by at least eight foreign governments, including Russia and China. Jerry Davis, who was CISO from 2010 until February 2013, testified that the VA didn’t encrypt databases containing patient information, employed weak user authentication, and failed to address a backlog of 13,000 security-related corrective actions. A VA auditor says her group has identified 4,000 current security vulnerabilities, and when asked who was responsible, she blamed recently resigned former VA CIO Roger Baker.


Reader Comments

6-6-2013 7-58-13 PM

From Digital Bean Counter: “Re: Robert Wood Johnson / CMS data article on LinkedIn. I added a comment stating why I thought the CMS study is misleading and referenced Data Nerd’s recent Reader’s Write post on HIStalk. My comment was deleted. How are we to have a transparent industry if the organizations we work with are not willing to be transparent themselves?” RWJF issued a challenge for developing an app that would somehow make the useless CMS information valuable, to which I would issue a challenge of my own: explain exactly what a consumer would do with this information to save the healthcare system money.

6-6-2013 10-31-19 PM

From Another Epic Go-Live: ”Re: Plains Regional Medical Center, Clovis, NM. On June 1, the 106-bed hospital became the first of Presbyterian Healthcare Services’ (NM) eight hospitals to go live with Epic. The rest will be rolled out over the next year.”

From Sad Day in Madison: “Re: accused predator. Many are shaken since he is one of the ‘fast crowd’ of young Madison professionals who fly out every week, make a lot of money, and hit the bars on the weekend.” Brian Stowe, a 28-year-old Epic project manager, is charged with sexual assault after prosecutors say he drugged at least nine women and filmed himself with them. Police recovered videos and pictures as evidence. They also retrieved the Epic-issued laptop that was visible in them with the help of Epic’s HR people. The court commissioner set bail at $500,000 because Stowe has wealthy parents and access to savings from his job.

6-6-2013 9-25-26 PM 6-6-2013 9-26-19 PM

From Small World: “Re: Duncan James (above left) replacing Vern Davenport (above right) at MModal. Isn’t this the second time? Vern was CEO of Misys Healthcare when they owned what is now QCPR.” QuadraMed acquired Misys CPR in the fall of 2007, but Vern stayed with Misys until a few months later when Misys and Allscripts merged. He stayed with Allscripts for almost three years, then went to Quintiles for a short stay, and then to Medquist, which eventually acquired MModal.

6-6-2013 4-01-04 PM

inga_small From Ed Marx: “Re: European shoes. Saw these shoes and thought of you.” Ed is touring Europe and has been kind enough to send me a few photos to satisfy my shoe obsession. Always good to have options for next year’s HIStalkapalooza!


HIStalk Announcements and Requests

inga_small Some of this week’s highlights from HIStalk Practice include: eClinicalWorks, Allscripts, and NextGen are the dominant EHR providers for freestanding practices while Epic, Allscripts, and Cerner dominate hospital-owned practices, according to a HIMSS Analytics/CapSite report. CIMRO, the REC for Nebraska, sells off its HIT consulting division, ensuring the continuation of the consultant practice after CIMRO’s grant funding runs out. Athenahealth extends a guarantee that it will waive customer service fees if not ready for the ICD-10 transition by the October 2014 deadline. Children are more likely to be fully vaccinated for influenza when a popup alert is added to the EMR. A nasty storm could be brewing in Massachusetts as officials determine how to interpret and implement a state law requiring the meaningful use of EHR in order to obtain licensure. iPads and iPhones are physicians’ favorite devices for interacting with EHRs and staff. Dr. Gregg offers some clever humor for those rough HIT days. Join the fun and sign up for the e-mail updates when you checking out these stories. Thanks for reading.

6-6-2013 7-16-27 PM

Welcome to new HIStalk Gold Sponsor CliniComp. The company’s Essentris EMR suite lineup includes solutions for CPOE, critical care, perinatal and fetal, ED, acute care, data repository, and real-time clinical surveillance. CliniComp takes full contractual responsibility for their systems, eliminating the need for IT resources for configuration, testing, training, and servicing and allowing customers to focus on patient care. It’s a provider of EMRs for the Department of Defense. Thanks to ClinicComp for supporting HIStalk.

Here’s a CliniComp video on the Essentris clinical workflow suite.

On the Job Board: Senior Product Manager, Compliance Program Manager, Systems Implementation Engineer, Dental Imaging Specialist. HIStalk sponsors get free job postings.

6-6-2013 7-35-40 PM

The new Webinar program is going gangbusters with a bunch of them upcoming. I recruit at least two experts to review a recorded practice session with me, and the Webinar doesn’t get the green light until we think it’s of suitable quality for the HIStalk audience. If you are a provider executive willing to help me as an occasional reviewer, let me know. It takes about an hour to watch the video and jot down your recommendations, and you can do it whenever it’s convenient. I’ll send you a nice Amazon gift certificate for your time. I can use IT executives (CIOs and IT directors) and CMIOs or other informatics clinicians. My most pressing need is for a couple of HIM and clinical documentation improvement experts for the next scheduled Webinar.


Acquisitions, Funding, Business, and Stock

6-6-2013 10-33-56 PM

Endo Health Solutions says it will consider options for its HealthTronics urology business, will eliminate 15 percent of positions, and reduce annual spending by $325 million. The company reduced earnings estimates by two-thirds.

Ascension Health Ventures makes a strategic investment in GetWellNework.

Xerox acquires Tallahassee, FL-based LearnSomething, whose employee e-learning solutions are used by 85 percent of US retail pharmacy chains to educate staff about new products.


Sales

Dignity Health, Legacy Health, and Catholic Health Initiatives will use Blackbaud CRM for fundraising.

6-6-2013 10-36-36 PM

Thomas Jefferson University Hospitals (PA) selects ICD-10 Intelligence and Compliance and Revenue and Integrity solutions from MedAnalytics.

Neosho Memorial Regional Medical Center (KS) chooses Access to provide bar-coded wristbands and face sheets.

AMEOS Group will implement Cerner Millennium and Lighthouse at two of its German facilities.


People

6-6-2013 6-45-30 PM

QPID hires Janine Powell (Encore Health Resources) as VP of client services.

6-6-2013 6-46-11 PM

PatientsLikeMe names Marcia Nizzari (Good Start Genetics) VP of engineering.

6-6-2013 6-47-08 PM

Passport Health Chairman Jim Lackey joins NextGxDx’s board.

6-6-2013 6-47-40 PM

iHT2 CEO Waco Hoover is selected to co-chair the 2013 WEDI Report Initiative.

6-6-2013 8-20-07 PM 6-6-2013 8-20-40 PM 6-6-2013 8-21-14 PM

J. C. Lundquist, Jeff Nestor, and Linda Jackson join Lucca Consulting Group as regional VPs.


Announcements and Implementations

HealtheConnections, the RHIO for Central New York, goes live on eHealth Connect Image Exchange integrated with its Mirth HIE platform.

6-6-2013 10-38-10 PM

Cleveland Clinic announces that it will give patients access to physician notes, pathology reports, and health issues via its Epic MyChart patient portal.

The State of Georgia launches the first phase of GeorgiaDirect, a secure e-mail system based on the Medicity platform.

HealthBridge and the Ohio Information Partnership, which manages the CliniSync HIE, launch connectivity using Direct.

6-6-2013 8-16-19 PM

GE Healthcare kicks off its Centricity Imaging IT Tour 2013 with stops this week in Texas. The 60-hospital road show runs through early October.


Innovation and Research

More than 70 medical, research, and advocacy groups in 41 countries will create a research database of their genetic and clinical data. Among them are NIH, Dana-Farber, Harvard, MIT, Johns Hopkins, and Stanford. The organizations will develop ways to standardize the data and to implement privacy controls that respect patient choice.


Technology

6-6-2013 10-05-14 PM

Miami Children’s Hospital (FL) rolls out the Fit4Kids Care iPhone app that provides indoor campus way-finding, wait times, a physician directory, and the ability to purchase gift shop items and order room service.

6-6-2013 10-12-54 PM

All Facebook employees will by the end of 2013 use hGraph, an open source visual representation of health status. It can use EHR information to create many of its views.


Other

Seattle Children’s Hospital reports that queries that took five minutes to run now finish in under four seconds after moving to IBM Big Data technology.

6-6-2013 3-44-34 PM

Greenway Medical Technologies opens its new corporate headquarters in Carrollton, GA.

6-6-2013 3-52-55 PM

Athenahealth scores highest in ambulatory EMR usability according to a new KLAS report. Success in achieving high usability in different EHRs ranged from 55 percent (McKesson) to 85 percent (athenahealth).

States are selling de-identified patient hospitalization information, but privacy expert Latanya Sweeney says the de-identification method isn’t hard to crack when you match the information against other databases. She paid $50 for records and was able to connect them to newspaper stories about accidents and crimes, thereby re-identifying the detailed medical records of 35 patients. An executive of a hospital performance data company says his employer immediately removes the ZIP codes provided by the states, saying they provide an easy link to other databases such that, “You might as well have the patient’s electronic medical record number.”

A Forbes opinion piece says electronic medical records are making doctors unhappy, saying (a) they turn doctors into box-checkers; (b) 75 percent of their capability does nothing except meet government mandates; (c) there’s no proof that government-mandated data collection improves care; and (d) conversion to ICD-10 will be expensive and will benefit mostly data miners.

The HIMSS EHR Association will announce creation of an EHR Developer Code of Conduct next week in Washington, DC.

The three doctors in Canada whose former employer refused to provide them with electronic copies of their patient files will get the information after all. Midway Walk-In Healthcare Centre followed the legal guidelines in sending paper medical records for a $35 fee, but pointed out that the law doesn’t require it to provide copies of electronic records even though a significant amount of  patient information is stored only in electronic form. The Ministry of Health intervened, convincing the owner of the walk-in clinic to obtain an electronic copy of the information from the clinic’s EMR vendor and send it to the departed doctors within 24 hours. The College of Physicians and Surgeons of Saskatchewan couldn’t help negotiate because the owner of the walk-in clinic isn’t a doctor.

Weird News Andy observes that migraines suck, but so does the cure. A writer in England says her migraine headaches were cured by hirudotherapy, applying leeches to her skin to remove blood.


Sponsor Updates

6-6-2013 2-07-45 PM

  • Billian’s HealthDATA and Porter Research employees participated in the Women in Healthcare Luncheon sponsored by the Georgia Association of Healthcare Executives.
  • Caradigm announces that one million caregivers are now users of its Identity and Access Management solutions.
  • Emdeon will present a series of educational sessions during AHIP Institute 2013.
  • HIMSS Analytics publishes the 5th annual US Ambulatory Electronic Health Record and Practice Management Study (previously published by HIMSS acquisition CapSite) which includes information on HIStalk sponsors ADP AdvancedMD, Aprima, eClinicalWorks e-MDs, GE, Greenway, McKesson, MedPlus MED3OOO, NextGen, OptumInsight, and Vitera.
  • Research and advisory firm Aite Group names PatientPay as the only new online bill pay provider working through PM software for maximum workflow efficiency. 
  • eHealth Technologies enhances its eHealthViewer ZF viewer to include real-time medical imaging collaboration and interaction.
  • T-System offers tips for earning optimal reimbursement for observation status.
  • Financial Post profiles TELUS Health, which has grown to be Canada’s largest EMR provider.
  • CCHIT certifies NextGen Electronic Dental Record version 4.3 with ONC 2014 Edition criteria as a Complete EHR.
  • Orion Health will participate in next month’s HIC 2013, Australia’s longest-running and largest HIT event.
  • Informatica introduces Vibe, an embeddable virtual data machine that provides a single simple virtualized data infrastructure.
  • Allscripts and its recent acquisition dbMotion host over 200 attendees at its dbU population health forum, which included a discussion of how Allscripts is driving care coordination, population health management, and consumer engagement. 
  • Frost & Sullivan recognizes Acuo Technologies with the 2012 North American Award for Market Share Leadership for its vendor-neutral archiving and enterprise imaging technologies. 

EPtalk by Dr. Jayne

Despite our voluminous coverage of Meaningful Use, CMS, and the ONC, HIStalk isn’t just about the US healthcare scene. Reports from across the pond note that an air ambulance had to abort its landing because off-duty “junior doctors” were hosting a BBQ near their lodging, which is close to the pad. For those of you who wonder where Oban is, it’s not far from Loch Lomond in Scotland.

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Three physician Senators (Tom Coburn, John Barrasso, and Rand Paul) join Senator John Boozman in trying to block the implementation of ICD-10. The Cutting Costly Codes Act was introduced in the House in April. In addition to halting ICD-10, it calls for a study on preventing disruption during the migration from ICD-9.

The Senate has been busy in other ways, with Chuck Grassley and Ron Wyden calling for increased transparency in Medicare claims data. They plan to reintroduce the Medicare Data Access for Transparency and Accountability Act. The aptly acronym-bearing Medicare DATA Act as initially introduced  would create a publicly searchable Medicare payment database as well as ensuring that data on payments to physicians do not fall under an exemption for Freedom of Information Act requests.

Since I’ve apparently got a DC vibe going on this week, I’m interested to see what readers think about the Safeguarding America’s Pharmaceuticals Act. It’s aimed at creating a national system to make it easier to trace drugs from synthesis to market, which in theory should help fight drug counterfeiting. I’m counting on all of you because my knowledge of pharmacy IT systems is limited to calling retail chains in my area to see when they will be ready to accept electronic prescriptions for controlled substances and asking them not to send multiple refill requests before adequate time has elapsed for a physician response. What vendors do you think would jump into this space?

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Here’s your opportunity to test your EHR’s ability to generate drug recall reports and your staff’s skill at documenting over-the-counter and herbal remedies. After years of us thinking Ginkgo Biloba was good to support memory, the National Institutes of Health releases a study indicating it might actually be a carcinogen.

One of my staff shared this piece about medical directors who search social media looking for “worrisome” issues during the hiring process. The article coaches would-be Facebook stalkers on what is appropriate to consider when determining if candidates match the office culture. It also reminds readers to steer clear of information that doesn’t belong in the hiring process including race and ethnicity, disability, religion, and pregnancy. It recommends considering using a third-party screening firm that is familiar with appropriate state laws.

I talked earlier this week about smart phones making us dumber. A regular reader sent me the link to this Northwestern University study on parenting on the digital age. Nearly 40 percent of families fell into the heaviest media use category with 11 hours of screen media per day. A New York Times blog notes that this time may have been double counted with parents using multiple screens, such using a computer while watching TV.

Researchers were surprised that parents were introducing their children to technology rather than simply responding to requests. Based on the behavior I see at the hospital (where the iPhone is the most popular childcare provider, at least in the ER) I’m not that surprised. There are ways to distract a hurt child that don’t involve Angry Birds. How about a book? Or telling them a story? I know my dad reads HIStalk regularly, so here’s a shout-out in thanks for all those retellings of Herkimer the Helicopter.


Contacts

Mr. H, Inga, Dr. Jayne, Dr. Gregg, Lt. Dan, Dr. Travis.

More news: HIStalk Practice, HIStalk Connect.

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Currently there are "14 comments" on this Article:

  1. “…The court commissioner set bail at $500,000 because Stowe has wealthy parents and access to savings from his job….”

    I didn’t know bail was set based on an ability to pay.

  2. Is wealth not always a factor in bail setting? It’s not your ability to pay, it’s your ability to flee once you do. The bail is supposed to be sufficient to make you actually return to court (ie, it must be high enough that you don’t care and jump/lose bail).

  3. Re: Forbes piece on EMR’s turning physicians into box-checkers

    So sorry to do that to you doc. I was shocked as a new nurse when I saw a committee of nurses and the ward clerk trying to decipher a drug, route, and dose scribbled on a chart. It took them about 5 minutes to devine the order and that was after a long discussion about the physician’s speciality and what he usually ordered. I asked why they didn’t just call the physician for clarification and was told that they didn’t want to get yelled at. Four people X 5 minutes X 1 order. You do the math.

    Within a year I transferred to the ITdepartment and I have been trying to build the electronic bridge between physicians and the rest of us ever since. So Dr. Checkbox, let me tell you, it’s better. Safer. More accurate. And now you can yell at the IT department instead.

  4. RE: RWJ grant for pricing app…
    The only thing the RWJ project will show is that 1) RWJ has money to burn 2) transparency will change nothing, because prices (charges) are meaningless data points warped by 50 years of changing govenment and third party payment formuli. See my previous posts about this subject for details.
    Now if RWJ wants to uncover some real issues they should pay researchers to analyze how the managerie of payment systems created the mess in provider prices.
    Consider this: Every good MBA program has a specialty in Tax Accounting. Hospital/Physician payment and billing regulations are at least as complex as our beloved 1040 forms. Yet there is no MBA/MHA program specializing in healthcare payment systems. That’s where RWJ should put its money!

  5. @ Dr. Jayne –

    Interesting study on Ginkgo. My Dad (Ph.D. in Agriculture from Ohio State) ran the only Gingko Biloba farm in North America (near Shaw Air Force Base in Sumter, SC) for over 20 years working for the Swiss-German pharmaceutical company that owned the farm and production plant. I made a lot of good money in high school driving a modified cotton picker that stripped the leaves from the trees every fall. $9/hr driving a cotton picker in the late 80s/early 90s was good money for me and my brother. Not doubting the study; but, Gingko is prescribed very heavily in Europe still and there is a lot of money being made in the supplement market (someone is taking it). Seems some anecdotal evidence would have pointed this out earlier (like some time within the last 1,000+ years of use in the Far East). I found Gingko leaves on the currency of Japan and Korea during my Army years. My Dad (who passed in 2007) would have been very interested in this study. Thanks for posting!

  6. Recycling:

    In the ever increasingly crony capitalist system we have in the US, getting to the top is more important than ever because the rewards as so disproportionate. What continues to boggle my mind is how difficult it is to penetrate the C-suite of a large company but once you do how you can ride that merry-go-ride seemingly non-stop even if the performance track of your company is very mixed at best.

  7. Regarding “RWJF issued a challenge for developing an app that would somehow make the useless CMS information valuable, to which I would issue a challenge of my own: explain exactly what a consumer would do with this information to save the healthcare system money.” It would enable consumers with cost information that would alter their consumption and spend behaviors—despite the flaws in the cost data itself (e.g., cost does not equal actual reimbursement). This change in customer behavior will allow market forces to take effect, and also promote entrepreneurial ventures that help customers become smarter (i.e. Castlight).

  8. Talked to folks at Polomar Medical Center in CA and their IT department has been replaced by Cerner staff as Cerner starts to outsource hospital IT staffing. New business direction for Cerner??

  9. Re: Recycling

    Blame the corporate culture of experience trumping everything else when it comes to hiring. No one is willing to train employees anymore and they just want to hire someone that’s already done the job before.

  10. Re: FLPoggio’s comment.

    You are missing the point about this data. Sure, absolute prices being charged (or paid) may be a result of a convoluted and regulated marketplace but relative prices are not. The data allows consumers to see if there’s variability in prices being charged for the same condition in their zip code/city/state etc. And that information is valuable, even if it is not actionable right now because of the way the healthcare industry is structured and incentivized.

    Re: Digital Bean Counter’s comment

    Yes, it is unfortunate that your comment was deleted from LinkedIn, especially if it was done if the moderator did not agree with your opinion. Do you mind posting your comment again here?

    Re: Mr. HISTalk’s quip following Digital Bean Counter’s quote

    The given dataset may not have the effect of empowering consumers to save healthcare dollars (realistically – is there any single action that can make that happen?) so aside from that straw man argument, it is unclear what is your real beef against having that data being available. At the very least, it starts to introduce some transparency into the system. That cannot be a bad thing, right?

  11. @LaceyUnderall

    you know, it’s great that doctors are able to put things into checkboxes to make sure everything is done properly. every process is efficient and reproducible. it’ll all be electronic too. once we have automated IV pumps that take a direct feed from the EMR, pharmacy automation that makes sure everything is properly dispensed, delivered, and administered, & automated monitoring devices that feed the EMR, doctors will be able to manage everything through the EMR. hospitals won’t need RNs, just a small number of LPNs to circle the floors and make sure everything’s OK. after all, what do RNs have that LPNs don’t, just a little more knowledge and experience, right? computers can take care of that part. then nurses will have even more free time! won’t it be great! nurse shortage solved!

  12. Response to Joey:
    Relative prices are useless as well because even when two hospitals are across town, keep in mind that their patient mix and third party utilization could be quite different. That means when a CFO was setting charges he would ‘price-up’ services that got me more third party reimbursement, while my competitor across town might do the opposite since his mix and third party utilization were very different.

    So today if I need an appendectomy and hospital A charges $10k, and Hospital B charges $5k that does not relate in any way to quality, or any other consumer oriented criteria.

    My primary point is if you use WARPED charges as the basis for your choice, you are making a very bad decision based on bad data. By the way as a former CFO I can assure you in a competitive situation the CFO at Hospital A would quickly give the private payor a friendly discount of 50% just for asking.

    Key point is; bad data will only foster bad decisions.

  13. Re: FLPoggio

    (The CMS data has both, the average price (that is, the chargemaster data) as well as average reimbursement – although your argument pertains specifically to the chargemaster part of the dataset so lets stick to that for now)

    You make a very interesting point. If cross-town hospitals are able to charge such discrepant prices there are only three reasons for it:

    1. Hospital A charging $10K for appendectomy has either significantly better quality in terms of outcomes or has significant brand recognition that allows it to be a price maker. This is perfectly fine in a capitalistic economy and if that’s hospital A, then more power to it.
    2. Hospital A is a monopoly in that market that allows it to be a price maker.
    3. There is lack of price transparency – thus those with better negotiating power (large private insurers, large employers, CMS) are able to get better prices and everyone else gets shanked.

    #2 and #3 are clearly undesirable and this data at the very least can highlight places where this is happening.

    In any case, there is no such thing as bad data except data that is wrong. There certainly can be bad interpretations of data or, in many cases, data can be overloaded with expectations when it clearly isn’t equipped to provide the answers that people are looking for. That may very well be the case with this dataset with everyone from a data visualizer in his or her basement to NYT and WaPO and RJF looking to solve every problem in healthcare on the backs of this dataset. But one cannot blame them for their enthusiasm. There’s been such a lack of transparency in our industry, especially when it comes to pricing data, that something, anything gets people excited. The answer to concerns about that is not to clamp down and criticize such attempts and nitpick based on things such as DRG versus procedure, but to be constructive and move the process forward.

    In that spirit, I’d actually challenge you (and DataNerd and Mr. HISTalk) that if this dataset is not useful, what would you like to propose in terms of what sort of healthcare data should be available publicly that can help consumers make better choices. Not only from CMS, but what sort of data should provides and private insurers release to meet that goal?







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