Finally, health IT that streamlines workflow while enhancing care

                                           

                                 

    Most medical professionals endorse the meaningful use of health IT, yet may have had frustrating run-ins with software that were long on the buck but short on the bang.Indeed, navigating the IT landscape can be a maze of wrong turns for the practitioner.  Worse, it can at times be unbeneficial or even risky for the patient. Until MURX from IPractice.

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Incentives for meaningful use of IT

OVERVIEW

The Medicare and Medicaid EHR Incentive Programs will provide incentive payments to eligible professionals, eligible hospitals and critical access hospitals (CAHs) as they adopt, implement, upgrade or demonstrate meaningful use of certified EHR technology. Under this program Eligible Professionals will be paid incentives for upgrading to an Electronic Health Record program before 2015. Beginning in 2015, doctors will be penalized in the form of reduced Medicare payments. The incentive program differs Medicare is federally run by CMS and Medicaid incentive program is run by States and is voluntary.

Registration begins January3, 2011 and key to maximum incentive payments is early participation.

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News

Navy Medicine CIO: We are communicating with VA on EHR efforts

June 14, 2013

The CIO for Navy Medicine insisted this week that the Department of Defense is maintaining open communication lines with the Department of Veterans Affairs on electronic health record efforts.

In the closing keynote at the Government Health IT Conference & Exhibition in Washington, D.C., on Wednesday, Navy Medicine CIO CDR Cayetano Thornton--joined by Military Health System CIO David Bowen--candidly addressed concerns about a widening gap between the two agencies following Defense Secretary Chuck Hagel's announcement last month that DoD would be exploring commercial options for its own EHR system.

Lucile Packard suffers second data breach in six months

June 14, 2013

Lucile Packard Children's Hospital, a 311-bed facility in Palo Alto, Calif., has suffered its third data breach in four years--and its second in six months--this one potentially effecting 12,900 patients.

According to an announcement on the hospital's website, a password-protected, non-functional laptop computer that potentially could have contained limited medical information on pediatric patients was stolen from a "secured, badge-access controlled area of the hospital" between May 2 and May 8. Information on the laptop was related to operating room schedules over a three-year period beginning in 2009, so no financial information or Social Security numbers were compromised, according to the hospital. Vulnerable information, however, included patient names, ages, medical record numbers, telephone numbers, scheduled surgical procedures and names of physicians involved in procedures. 

Read more:www.fiercehealthit.com/story/lucile-packard-suffers-second-data-breach-six-months/2013-06-14
FDA calls for increased health IT cybersecurity efforts
With hackers and cyberattacks increasing as threats to medical devices, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration this week published new guidance calling for developers and healthcare facilities to beef up security efforts while creating and using those devices.

In its guidelines, the FDA recommended that all device manufacturers work to:

Limit unauthorized device access to only trusted users

Protect individual components from exploitation

Craft strategies for active security protections appropriate for a device's use environment

Provide methods for retention and recovery following security breakdowns

Read more: www.fiercehealthit.com/story/fda-calls-increased-health-it-cybersecurity-efforts/2013-06-14

 

Med groups express concern over proposed HIPAA changes

June 14,2013

A host of medical groups are up in arms over a proposal by the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services in April that potentially would allow protected mental health information to be reported to a federal gun background-check database, according to the Wall Street Journal. The plan would require HHS an amendment to HIPAA, which was strengthened by updates unveiled in January.

Among the groups opposed to the proposal are the National Association of State Mental Health Program Directors, which sent a letter to HHS last week saying that easing the rule could create a "significant chilling effect" on a patient's willingness to get care. The American Psychiatric Association, the American Medical Association and the American Psychological Association all sent similar letters to HHS.

Read more:www.fiercehealthit.com/story/med-groups-express-concern-over-proposed-hipaa-changes/2013-06-14

 

The importance of health IT adoption--from a parent's perspective

Patient access and engagement have been on my brain of late. Sure, that has a lot to do with the fact I attended both Health Datapalooza and the Health Privacy Summit last week in Washington, D.C.--but it's also due to a recent personal experience.

It took place a few weeks ago when I brought my child into the pediatrician for an on-again, off-again rash. After conversing with the doctor about the best plan of attack, I was told to take pictures the next time the rash appeared, to better help with diagnosis.

U.S. Medicare outlook improves as healthcare costs ease

(Reuters) - Slower growth in U.S. healthcare costs improved the budget outlook for the Medicare program for the elderly from last year, but the fortunes of the Social Security pension program have not changed despite a better economy, trustees of the programs said on Friday.

The trustees repeated warnings to Congress to pass reforms that will enable the programs to meet all of their long-term obligations, but their report adds to recent evidence of an easing in U.S. budget pressures, and could help encourage a sense of complacency in Washington.

The main trust fund that supports the Medicare healthcare program will be depleted in 2026, two years later than forecast last year, the trustees said in their annual status report.

The trustees attributed the improvement to lower projected spending for most treatment categories, especially in skilled nursing homes, an assumption in keeping with recent signs of slower healthcare inflation.

They also said the implementation of key parts of President Barack Obama's healthcare reform law next year will reduce costs by more than previously projected.

The report said the Social Security fund for retirees will be depleted in 2033, the same as forecast last year. But a much more pressing need is the 2016 depletion date for the Social Security's trust fund that pays benefits to people with disabilities.

While this is also unchanged from last year's report, it means that Congress now only has three years to agree on new funding or reforms that would avoid reduced payments to beneficiaries.

Depletion of the Medicare and Social Security trust funds does not mean that all benefits would stop. At the current rate of payroll tax collections, Medicare would be able to pay about 87 percent of costs after 2026, declining to 71 percent by 2047. Social Security would be able to pay about three quarters of its benefits through 2087, according to the report.

REFORM ENTHUSIASM DIMS

The programs represent the two largest federal expenditures and account for about one-third of all U.S. fiscal outlays. The reports will feed into bitter arguments between Democrats and Republicans over how to reform the programs to keep them solvent and able to support the needs of the massive Baby Boom generation that is now starting to retire.

The healthcare improvements cited by the trustees in the report could dampen enthusiasm, particularly among Democrats, for any reforms to entitlement programs. The report comes on the heels of other signs showing a quick, if only temporary, reduction in the U.S. budget deficit.

"It reinforces a consensus in this city that the crisis isn't imminent," said Greg Valliere, chief political strategist at Potomac Research Croup, a firm that advises investors on Washington politics. "A mood of complacency is intensifying over entitlement reform. There's no sense of urgency."

U.S. Treasury Secretary Jack Lew said the report supports Democrats' approach of protecting the basic structure of Social Security and Medicare, while reducing healthcare costs and excessive drug subsidies and asking wealthier seniors to contribute more.

While the Obama administration wants to work on bipartisan reforms to strengthen the programs' financial footing, Lew said "changes to Social Security and that involve deep cuts in benefits or privatization will be unacceptable."

Senator Bernard Sanders, a liberal Independent from Vermont, said the report shows that Social Security "is not going broke" and argued against Obama's proposal to limit future cost-of-living increases by applying a less-generous measure of inflation.

Sanders in a statement said the report showed the wealthy should pay more into the pension program. "We must lift the cap on Social Security payroll taxes and make the wealthy contribute the same percentage of their income as other workers," he said. "Today, someone making $10 million a year contributes the same amount of money as someone making $113,700. That is absurd."

Republicans in the House of Representatives, meanwhile, have proposed massive long-term changes to Medicare that would effectively convert the popular fee-for-service program into a voucher-like system that provides a subsidy to seniors to buy private health insurance.

"Today's report is yet another reminder that Medicare and Social Security are in great danger," said a spokesman for House Budget Committee Chairman Paul Ryan of Wisconsin, the leading Republican fiscal voice. "We need to protect and strengthen these critical programs."

Republicans also want to repeal Obama's healthcare reforms. But the report said the "modest improvement" in the Medicare finance outlook came from lower projected spending for most service categories "that reflect recent data suggesting that certain provisions of the Affordable Care Act will reduce growth in these costs by more than previously projected."

(Reporting by Margaret Chadbourn and David Lawder; Editing by Vicki Allen and Tim Ahmann)

www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/31/us-usa-health-retirement-idUSBRE94U0VW20130531

 

U.S. sets $1 billion healthcare innovation initiative

(Reuters) - The Obama administration on Wednesday announced a $1 billion initiative to fund innovations in federal healthcare programs aimed at cutting costs while improving the health results.

The Department of Health and Human Services said the money will be used to award and evaluate projects that test new payment and delivery models for federal programs including Medicare, Medicaid and the Children's Health Insurance Program.

The announcement marks the second round of innovation initiatives for the administration under President Barack Obama's 2010 Patient Protection and Affordable Care Act.

The government is looking for models that can quickly cut costs in outpatient or post-acute settings, improve care for people with special needs, transform healthcare providers' financial and clinical models or improve health conditions by clinical category, geographic area or socioeconomic class.

The application period runs from June 14 to August 15.

(Reporting by David Morgan; Editing by Gerald E. McCormick and Vicki Allen)

www.reuters.com/article/2013/05/15/us-usa-healthcare-innovation-idUSBRE94E0P320130515