Rodney Cain, Chief Information Officer, HealthBridge Joyce Beck, Chief Executive Officer, Thayer County Health Services Will Ross, Chief Operating Officer, Redwood MedNet Midwestern Grandparents on Vacation Communities Working Together to Improve Quality, Safety and Efficiency Using the NHIN 1 TUESDAY, 10:00 – 10:50AM
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Rodney Cain, Chief Information Officer, HealthBridge Joyce Beck, Chief Executive Officer, Thayer County Health Services Will Ross, Chief Operating Officer,
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Rodney Cain, Chief Information Officer, HealthBridge
Joyce Beck, Chief Executive Officer, Thayer County Health Services
Will Ross, Chief Operating Officer, Redwood MedNet
Midwestern Grandparents on Vacation
Communities Working Together to Improve Quality, Safety and Efficiency Using the NHIN
1
TUESDAY, 10:00 – 10:50AM
Midwestern Grandparents on Vacation
HealthBridge• Located in Cincinnati, Ohio• Represented by Rodney Cain, CIO
Redwood MedNet• Located in Ukiah, California• Represented by Will Ross, COO
Thayer County Health Services• Located in Hebron, Nebraska• Represented by Joyce Beck, CEO
HIMSS 2010 2
Rodney Cain, CIO
TUESDAY, 10:00 – 10:50AM
HealthBridge Background
» In operation since 1997
» Provides secure, real-time electronic health information exchange for Southwestern Ohio, Northern Kentucky and Southeastern Indiana
» One of only a handful of HIE/RHIOs nationwide with cash-positive, sustainable business model
• 97% of revenue from fees; <3% from grants
• 5-8% annual return for last five years
» HIT Regional Extension Center Awardee, February 2010
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HealthBridge Network
» Includes:
• 24 local hospitals in Kentucky, Ohio and Indiana
• 5000+ physicians and other professionals at hundreds of sites
• 17 local health departments
• Large commercial, hospital, & physician office labs
• Diagnostic centers
• Delivered 2.9 million clinical results in December 2009; more than 30 million total results in 2009
» EMR Feeds to 28 different vendors, 60+ versions
» 47 hospital information system connections for 10 different organizations
HIMSS 2010 5
Collaborative HIE Network
HealthLINC is a community-based organization leading the health information exchange (HIE) effort on behalf of healthcare stakeholders in Monroe and surrounding counties in South Central Indiana.
CCHIE was founded in 2007 as a multi-stakeholder non-profit community-wide health information exchange for the benefit of the medical community in Springfield, Ohio and surrounding areas.
Health Policy• Start from the Connecting for Health “Common Framework”• Harmonize with State and Federal privacy & security requirements
Business Operations• Focus on clinical data, not billing data• Focus on site level workflow from the perspective of an individual user (adaptive
business rules rather than imposed rules)• Make clinical data agile, with or without EHRs• Leverage open source software to disrupt legacy software lock in and incompatible
data silos• Build HIE services incrementally
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Redwood MedNet HIE Business Plan
Startup from 2005 to 2010• Grant funded HIE operations startup• Develop open source software as appropriate• Build enterprise health data exchange services• Transition from grants to paid services
Sustainability Model• Estimated breakeven point = 400 providers using the service• At current pace 400 providers should be on the system in 2011• 400 providers will require expansion beyond startup territory of
Mendocino, Lake and Sonoma Counties
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Redwood MedNet Timeline
2004 Steering Committee with members from local Medical Society, County Public Health and Community Clinic consortium
2005 Established an independent 501(c)(3) nonprofit corporation
2007 Pilot test new open source software for HIE operations
2008 Began production laboratory test result delivery in April
2009 Demonstrated CONNECT gateway in June; Began production radiology report delivery in September
2010 Live use of CONNECT gateway in February; Scheduled to begin e-Prescribing services in third quarter
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EHR Adoption Reality Check
“Four percent of physicians reported having an extensive, fully functional electronic records system, and 13% reported having a basic system.”
DesRoches, Campbell, et al.
July 2008
New England Journal of Medicine
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Redwood MedNet EHR Adoption Survey, 2009
• 8% of providers use EHR
• 5% of providers receive lab results in their EHR
• 90% of providers have broadband Internetin their office
• 59% of providers can access their office network from offsite
• 13% of providers say EHR is ready for broad adoption
• 30% of providers plan to implement EHR in the next 2 years
• 55% of providers do not plan to implement EHR in the next 2 years
HIMSS 2010 21
Health Information Liquidity
“EHRs are necessary but not sufficient for interoperability”
Penfield, Anderson, Edmunds & Belanger
January 2009
Booz Allen Hamlilton
HIMSS 2010 22
Crossing the Health Care IT Chasm
“Providers will appropriately be drawn to IT only if, where and when it can be shown to enable them to do their jobs more effectively.”
Stead & Lin
February 2009
National Academies Press
HIMSS 2010 23
Making Smart Health Care IT Investments
“We need to have more of an ‘enterprise’ approach to health IT implementation, but most of the health care industry isn’t part of an enterprise.”
Halamka
March-April 2009
Health Affairs
HIMSS 2010 24
Deciding When to Pursue and EHR
“Rushing to the EHR solely to optimize the amount of incentive funding is a recipe for disaster.”
Rishel
September 2009
Gartner Industry Research
HIMSS 2010 25
The Business Case for Interoperability
“Labs may decide it does not make business sense for them to send electronic results to physicians who do not represent enough business.”
Frohlich
October 2009
Testimony to HIT Standards Implementatation Workgroup
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Avoid Silos of Disconnected Information
“Exchange within business groups will not be sufficient. The goal is to have information flow seamlessly and effortlessly to every nook and cranny of our health system, when and where it is needed.”
Blumenthal
November 2009
ONC Email
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Are EHRs Helpful For Care Coordination?
“There is a gap between policy-makers’ expectation of current EMRs’ role in the coordination of care and clinicians’ real-world experience with them.”
O’Malley, Grossman, et al.
December 2009
Center for Studying Health System Change
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CONNECT v2.0 Demonstration in 2009
CONNECT v2.0 Demonstration in 2009
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Summary Record View from Redwood MedNet
Joyce Beck, MS, CEONHIN Connectivity Through The Eyes Of A Patient
How Connectivity Improves Patient Care
Southeast Nebraska Health Information Exchange (SENHIE)
TUESDAY, 10:00 – 10:50AM
Reason for Demonstration
• Test Data had only been sent on the NHIN between facilities
• Information Technology said it would work
• There were doubts from other HIE’s in Nebraska about NHIN
• If NHIN was to be endorsed I had to see it myself
• If our actions do not help a patient than all is for nothing
HIMSS 2010 32
Wellness Check Began at Thayer County Health Services in Hebron, Nebraska
• Dr. Bryan Hubl ordered lab test in Hebron for wellness check
• Lab results obtained and placed in EHR in Hebron
• Lab results then made available to Redwood Mednet in California for actual wellness exam
• Information also available on USB to fulfill meaningful use
HIMSS 2010 33
Second Step of Trip was Travel to Healdsburg, California for Wellness and Radiology Exam
• Wellness exam completed by Dr. Jeff Meckler at Alliance Medical Center, Healdsburg, California
• Lab results and patient visit summary from Thayer County retrieved by Redwood MedNet via CONNECT gateway
• Results of labs and x-ray of left hip taken in Healdsburg placed in Alliance Medical Center EHR
• Results could be placed on USBbracelet at patient request
HIMSS 2010 34
Final Step
• Returned to Thayer County Health Services to be seen by Dr. Hubl
• Wellness exam as well as results of x-ray was available to Dr. Hubl via the NHIN therefore no duplication of testing necessary
• Dr. Hubl was able to recommend treatment based on information gathered in both Hebron, Nebraska and Healdsburg, California
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Conclusion
• Information flowed from one facility to another without difficulty
• Duplication of testing was avoided due to availability of information via the NHIN and patient USB device
• Ease of availability of medical information provided better patient care
• The NHIN is functioning, provides patients with the information needed