Of course the other big non-HIMSS tech news is that KP dumped interim CIO Phil Bruce Tukstra and brought in another outsider. While the LA Times says that Tukstra ran Health Connect, I’m not so sure. Andy Weisenthal told me that he (on the TPMG side) and Louise Lang (on the plan side) ran it, and expressly said that Dodd (the CIO who went a few months back) had not much to do with it. And I’m a little cynical about the LA Times reporting on this last week too.
However, I have extracted a promise from a senior TMPG regional CMIO to go on the record about what he’s seeing—so hopefully I’ll have more details for you all soon but suffice it to say that not everyone was too happy about the Citrix approach
Meanwhile there was an interesting session I sat in on at HIMSS Monday from the CIO of Kaiser Hawaii about how to deal with down-time when you have an EMR. What he said was that every hour a mirror of the latest data is made and that it’s on a separate system that can be accessed if the main HealthConnect goes down. And then he said that most doctors would dream of having that level of data (i.e. what’s in the backup) and he’s probably right! But I guess the real question is was the low uptime (the Times says 80% only in some cases) a function of the power failures last year, or is it still going on? My understanding is that it’s the former.
Finally, I’m going to be on a panel in Vegas on April 30th with two one leading Kaiser basher”* (Justen Deal and Gadly) and apparently Kaiser has declined an invite <sigh>. Which I guess means that I’m going to be their tame blogger and be castigated for defending HealthConnect….
* term adopted from “Japan basher”
UPDATE: Justen emailed me to point out that not only had I called Bruce, Phil (hey it was 6 am!) and that he was not going to be on the Vegas panel (should have checked, his name was on an earlier agenda I saw but he never agreed) but also this:
Bruce was, without question, the "architect" of HealthConnect. Before he became
interim CIO, he was the VP specifically for HealthConnect. Dr. Liang has always
handled making sure HealthConnect improves the "quality" of our hospitals, while
Andy Wiesenthal’s job is to work with the physicians to make sure the system
meets their needs. Turkstra was in charge of designing and implementing the
system, while Dodd was in charge of making sure the infrastructure was in place
to support it. Finally, I hope you’ll consider not calling me a "basher"
("Japanese" or American) of Kaiser Permanente. Trying to paint someone as a
"basher," frankly, only makes you look like a "cheerleader." Since neither, as
far as I know, is true, I hope you’d consider not using it in the future.
I don’t know about who did within HealthConnect, so hopefully someone who does will tell me if Justen’s right or not.
As for the "basher" term, this is a little inside baseball, but the "Japan bashers" of the late 1980s actually felt that they were very pro-Japanese but that Japanese politics and society needed to become more open. So I think the reference to Justen as a Kaiser-basher is extremely correct in that context.