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Matthew Holt

Project HealthDesign and Health 2.0 Accelerator

Round 2 of Project HealthDesign, funded by the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, builds on a key learning from round 1: people live with and manage their health every day, not in discrete and separate episodes. This may seem like an obvious realization to some; but the “traditional” health care system most of us use is not really designed with this in mind. Our system is getting better at enabling patients to do things such as view a version of their electronic medical record or lab results online and automate appointment scheduling or payments. And yet, most of this progress is still limited to clinical and administrative data that is generated based on episodes of care and limited to the institutional medical record. This is where “observations in daily living” (ODLs) come in. Project HealthDesign defines ODLs as “personal clues to health that might include sleep patterns, diet, exercise, mood and medication adherence, all of which are critically important to health but not collected in a clinical setting.” By understanding ODLs, patients can be empowered to create a more meaningful portrait of their health, to shape daily health decisions and facilitate better health.

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RFID EMR Pioneer Says “RIP”

When Harvard Medical School and CareGroup CIO Dr. John Halamka agreed to place his medical  information on an RFID chip and have it implanted it in his arm, he triggered an instant global spotlight on this unusual form of portable electronic medical record. The decision, made in December 2004 and disclosed in early 2005, captured worldwide attention from places a diverse as Fox News, the BBC and the New England Journal of Medicine (where Halamka contributed a commentary ).

As recently as 2007, a debate over chip privacy and safety versus having critical medical data instantly at hand (as it were) was featured in a PLoS Medicine exchange.  In it, Halamka asserted, “Implantation of RFID devices is one tool, appropriate for some patients based on their personal analysis of risks and benefits, that can empower patients by serving as a source of identity and a link to a personal health record when the patient cannot otherwise communicate.”

Two years later, Halamka’s chip remains under his skin but he’s ready to turn over the idea that he’s a trendsetter to the undertaker. The technology “has been adopted by no one,” Halamka told me at a meeting on Patient-Centered Computing sponsored by Partners HealthCare’s Center on Information Technology Leadership. “As a technology it’s dead. Use the network, use the cloud to store your personal health records. Or in a pinch, use a USB drive. But the implanted RFID chip is not as a society where we’re going.”

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Defining “Meaningful Use” of Health IT

The federal government’s $20 billion stimulus programs for health IT (HIT) is on its way. Called Hitech—for Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act—it will fund the development of innovative HIT and use a “carrot & stick” financial approach to encourage clinicians to use HIT in meaningful ways. A debate now raging is how to define “meaningful use.”1

A Definition

Meaningful use, to me, means using HIT in ways that are of great value to the patient and other healthcare consumers. It doesn’t matter what types of software tools are used, what communication infrastructure is used, what standards are used, or what certifications are used. It just means that the using HIT should result in ever more effective and efficient (i.e., ever greater value) care delivery.

Increasing care value is unlikely unless clinicians obtain information and guidance assisting them in answering difficult questions, making tough diagnostic and treatment decisions, collaborating effectively, and taking competent action. In addition, healthcare consumers (patients, clients, customers, etc.) would benefit from assistance in selecting the most cost-effective treatment options for existing conditions, and in managing their own health in ways that prevent illness, control chronic conditions, and increase their wellbeing.

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MedicExchange

MedicExchange does product reviews for radiology and HIT products.  We have a thriving community of 50,000 decision makers who use the site to network, read customer reviews and research products for RFP’s.   We are bringing transparency to the industry and trying to minimize ‘buyer confusion’ with a goal to help buyers make the right decisions.  Our product showcase platform offers vendors and manufacturers a unique way to show off their products by using video, instant messaging and other tools to communicate with buyers and existing customers.  We really think we are onto something but we want to hear what you think, register for free on www.medicexchange.com and network and research products with other decision makers.

The Health IT Stimulus and FQHCs — Don’t Forget About Us!

James Kahn There is a critical element in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) that targets funds for Federally-Qualified Community Health Centers (FQHCs).  An FQHC is an organization defined by the Medicare and Medicaid statutes that receives funding under Section 330 of the Public Health Service Act.  FQHCs provide primary care services for all age groups and provide preventive health services on site to some of the country's most vulnerable populations, and they are an important part of this country's primary care delivery system.  Among services that FQHCs must provide directly (or by arrangement with another provider) include: dental services, mental health and substance abuse services, transportation services necessary for adequate patient care, hospital and specialty care.  There are more than 16 million Americans who are served by FQHCs.

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Op-Ed: Cost-Reduction Strategies Help Hospitals Weather Economic Uncertainty

David Markoski In today’s current economic climate, many hospitals are reducing staff to cut costs and balance their budgets. An even greater number are trying to reduce administrative costs to save money for the difficult days ahead and retain their employees.While reducing staff may help the bottom line, it may threaten a hospital’s long-term success by jeopardizing quality patient care and its reputation. Cutting non-salary costs, meanwhile, may save as much—or more—while kick-starting organizational recovery when the economy improves. Since these cost reductions do not compromise patient care or the level of support hospitals provide to their physicians, they create long-term efficiencies that will serve the hospitals into the future.Employee compensation accounts for the single largest item on a hospital’s budget, but the aggregated costs of goods and services are greater. These costs represent dozens of money-saving opportunities—from supply chain management and physician-preference items to service contracts and pharmacy—that can impact the bottom line without affecting patient care.

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Jonathan Teich, CMIO, Elsevier

Jonathan Teich, CMIO of Elsevier discusses the role of decision support in health care. Jim Lederer from Novant Health, a hospital system in North Carolina sits in on the interview and adds his perspective.

Andy Hurd, CEO, CareFx

Matthew is away in Peru sampling the delights
of the Andes this week. He had a very busy month with conferences
in Hawaii, HIMSS in Chicago, WHCC in Washington DC, and of course
Health 2.0 Meets Ix in Boston. Lots and lots of video was taken during
all those trips, and we gnomes back at THCB are taking the opportunity
to show you some of it. This week we're presenting all the interviews Matthew had at HIMSS in Chicago that haven't already been shown.

Andy Hurd, CEO, CareFx, talks about his company, which provides a way
of viewing disparate systems, by sharing views into different hospital
departmental systems quickly and relatively cheaply. It's a fix for the
messy "different systems don't talk to each other" problem, and it's
catching on in the big hospital market, with explosive growth last year.

Luis Machuca, CEO, Kryptiq

By Luis Machuca, CEO, Kryptiq explains how his secure email solution is
mixing and matching data between different providers.

The End of Dr. Marcus Welby

Marcus Welby hard at work For most of us the term “Family Doctor” brings up images of Dr. Marcus Welby, the quintessential family doctor. There are almost no Marcus Welbys left out there, but there are thousands of family doctors in small practices that still have personal relationships with their patients and their families. Most of these physicians chose medicine for all the right reasons and most are frustrated with a system that seems to perversely sabotage their desire to provide quality care to the families in their charge. These days we are witnessing what could be the beginnings of major healthcare reform in this country. Will this also inadvertently be the beginning of the Industrial Revolution for primary care? Are we looking at Institutions of Primary Care replacing the solo family practitioner? At first glance it seems that in the name of efficiency and cost cutting these institutions, or mega-clinics, make perfect sense. After all, no one can dispute the achievements of the Mayo Clinic. Similar consolidation occurred in almost every sector of the economy in one form or another. The corner bookstores are all but extinct and the same is true for mom-and-pop grocery stores and pharmacies. It usually starts in the city and then Wal-Mart completes the process in small-town America.

There is much talk these days about medical homes. At first I thought that Marcus Welby was the perfect medical home. He was accessible to his patients day and night. He was there when the babies came and when it was time to accept the inevitable end of life, providing hope and comfort and sound medical advice devoid of unnecessary expensive tests and heroic measures. His patients trusted him and they were very likely to accept his prescriptions for changes in lifestyle. He coordinated all their care with hospitals and specialists. Sounds like a medical home to me. However when you begin reading today’s definition of a medical home, you quickly realize that Dr. Welby would not qualify. He simply didn’t have enough staff. The solo doc in rural Nebraska of today will not qualify either.  And then there’s the technology question. Dr. Welby’s definition of technology was a stethoscope. Today’s medical home requires technology beyond Dr. Welby’s wildest imagination. For over a decade, HIT vendors peddled EMRs at exorbitant prices and failed to convince doctors in small practices to purchase anything. Maybe because the value proposition to the physician was nonexistent. Today we are about to make these certified, overpriced and, by and large, unusable products mandatory for medical homes and the practice of medicine in general. The solo doc in Nebraska cannot afford these products even if the government is proposing to eventually bear some of the financial burden.Are we saying that a medical home should by definition be a mega-clinic  with deep enough pockets to bear the costs of arbitrarily imposed staffing models and dubious software purchases? Shouldn’t the choice of tools, whether staffing or technology,  be left to the physician?  Is anybody consulting America’s practicing physicians on how best to practice medicine? Are we absolutely certain that large institutions will provide all around better quality of care? I fear that the independent family doctor is going to go the way the corner bookstore went, and be replaced by the cold, impersonal, shiny mega-clinic chain in the city. It won’t be long after that before Wal-Mart sets up the Wal-Health clinics in rural America. Any young kids out there planning on going to medical school and hoping for an illustrious career with Wal-Mart?

Margalit Gur-Arie is COO at GenesysMD (Purkinje), an HIT company focusing on web based EHR/PMS and billing services for physicians. Prior to GenesysMD, Margalit was Director of Product Management at Essence/Purkinje and HIT Consultant for SSM Healthcare, a large non-profit hospital organization.

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