Obama is smart. His signing of the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health
(HITECH) Act (as part of the Stimulus package) recognizes the
importance of health IT as the foundation for health care reform and
cost savings. Good data and good consumer experience is a way to drive
a policy consensus when payment reform and health reform come to a vote
on Capitol Hill.
Technology certification and meaningful health
records exchange are the cornerstones of the HITECH Act. Health IT
should be engineered to promote transparency in health care
effectiveness and to reduce regional differences. To achieve this, the
secretary of HHS must ensure that scope of the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT) does not extend beyond hospital health records.
HHS
must stimulate reform through systems and services innovation. As with
previous federal actions, such as the the break-up of the AT&T
monopoly, HHS can enable future generations of innovation by excluding
health information exchange and patient-controlled health records from
the domain of CCHIT, big hospital and big vendor interests.