In her August 14th 2016 interview with the LA Times regarding the ACA and value-based reimbursement, HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell stated, …”and medical providers want this.1” After reading this article, I wondered for a moment if I am working in the same healthcare system as the Secretary. Having spent a significant part of my 36-year career negotiating financial transactions with and/or on behalf of practicing physicians, I can unequivocally state that, unlike healthcare thought -leaders and policy wonks, a scant few practicing physicians are on board with population health management, value-based care and the “triple aim.”
It is essential to significantly improve the value of healthcare and it will require a lot of work by all. Given the disconnect between the policy makers/‘thought- leaders’ and the nation’s practicing physicians, I am pretty sure we are not going to get very far. Most practicing physicians consider the current movement to value based care/population health to be ineffective, expensive, bureaucratic interference with the practice of medicine.
Before addressing the special attractions and vulnerabilities of healthcare data and software, a little background on cybersecurity of complex systems may be helpful: The single most important lesson from our experiences with conventional networked systems is that all of them can be hacked, and all will eventually be hacked. There’s a simple equation for hackers: their investments are related to the value of the data. Alas, because electronic health records (EHRs) have a relatively high value to criminals, we should expect hackers to make significant efforts to penetrate EHRs. (More on this later.) Our experience also teaches us that erecting protections to mitigate hacking is never by itself an adequate defense. Instead, it is always necessary for health IT leaders to make significant efforts monitoring the EHR system for unanticipated behavior. Equally critical, it’s always necessary to plan how to respond to detected attacks.
Maybe it is just the shock of being post Labor Day and realizing that summer is fading into the rear view mirror or maybe it was something I ate for breakfast that spurred new hope. But I think that this is the year that the patient centric approach to data in life sciences finally takes off. And along with that launch will come the massive rapid migration to cloud and data lake architectures for pharma data.
