This is a summary of the HIT Trends Report for December 2010 (The Year in Review). You can get the current issue or subscribe here.
Out of 325 stories we covered in 2010, and a few new ones, we picked about 30 that best tell the story of the past year.
Tracking HITECH in 2010: The Year’s Top Stories
- 1. The biggest story in HIT this year is the elegance of the federal ARRA HITECH strategy combining provider incentives and disincentives with state health information exchanges and regional extension centers for support. While this plan is off to a slow start, it seems to be working.
2. In July the federal rules for meaningful use were unveiled; a core set of 15 required elements and a menu set of 10 optional elements among which 5 are selected. Providers will attest to meeting these measures. In the next stage in 2013, all measures will be mandatory and providers must demonstrate real meaningful use for most patients.
3. There are now 5 companies designated as authorized to certify EHR technology. The federal government is keeping an updated list of products that have been certified. At the end of 2010 the count of different certified product versions was over 200.
4. NHIN Direct is a concept that grew out of a blog by Wes Rishel, at Gartner. It’s meant for simple communications between parties who know each other. Its focus is on meaningful use, specifically, summary care records, referrals, discharge summaries and others. It’s also being used as the foundation for the clinical messaging service recently announced by Surescripts.
5. The federal government also began work on comparative effectiveness research (CER), which it now refers to as “patient-centered outcomes research.” $435 million has been awarded by AHRQ across dozens of companies and projects focused on developing patient registries, clinical data networks, and other forms of electronic health data systems in order to generate data about treatment outcomes and options that can be compared by patients.
6. Todd Park, CTO at HHS, summed up the federal strategy as “incentives plus information equals transformation.” He connects the dots between the provider incentives in HITECH, provider payment reform in the Affordable Care Act, and Data Liberación, making federal data available for innovation.
