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Why You Will Soon Get Access to Your Health Information

 
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A few years ago, my partners in AHITA.org (a non-profit organized to help providers implement EHRs) and I implemented an electronic health record in a physician practice. Along the way, we evaluated every major product and discussed with the physicians in the practice what they needed and how to examine their workflows to automate.

It was very effortful, took almost a year, and cost the physician practice about $50,000 in consulting fees. At the end of the engagement, the AHITA partners decided in all good conscience that all the products sucked and wouldn’t help a small practice; we kind of drifted away from the idea of electronic health records. Our physician partner, who had written his own EHR, gave up in disgust because he couldn’t get anyone to buy it.

Now, Obama’s administration has given incentives that mandate EHRs. 2010 looks like it is going to be the year. And hopefully, many of the products have improved in their ease-of-use and financing programs during the past couple of years. There’s a lot of behavior change around implementing new technologies, and even practices that already own EHR technology need to learn to use it properly to qualify for the meaningful use incentives the government is offering. For most practices, this will mean an increased focus on workflows around ordering, e-prescribing, and clinical decision support and some attention to improving them, not just automating dysfunction.

As far as I can discern from listening to the Allscripts webinar I just heard, many of the incentives revolve around seeing more Medicare and Medicaid patients. All those physicians who were going to give up Medicare patients will be re-thinking that, because to qualify for the stimulus money they have to prove that 44 percent of their volume is Medicare, or 30 percent is Medicaid. And this is calculated by individual physician, not by practice.

For a physician, the Medicare part of the program starts this year. But this year you only have to prove that you used electronic records for 90 days during the year, and that at least 50 percent of your patient encounters have to be at a practice using a certified EHR. That goes up with every passing year.

Another interesting incentive: the physician’s payment will be based on multiplying his or her allowable charges by 75 percent, so seeing a Medicare patient and using an EHR should make the patient (me) worth 75 percent more to the physician who sees me, especially if he delivers professional services, and doesn’t just send me for an MRI or to a lab. The incentive doesn’t count fees for surgicenters or technical components of a doctor visit. This will be Medicare Part B services. (A physician aiming to collect $18k in 2011 has to submit allowable charges of $24k to Medicare and she will get paid $24k+$18k).

Physicians have to choose whether they want to participate in the Medicare part of the incentive program, or the Medicaid part. For a busy primary care practice, I bet Medicaid patients begin to look more attractive.

Now, away from the money and on to the part that benefits the patient:

Your doctor will now have to use five decision-support alerts in her software, and will have to give you electronic access to your records within 48 hours of your request. The incentives encourage the patient to become part of the conversation, and the doctor to communicate with the patient electronically. The government wants people to use personal health records, and for the physician to communicate with those PHRs, and that is going to happen FAST.

Here’s what the EHRs these physicians adopt will be required to do for the physician to get the subsidy:

• Electronically select, sort, retrieve, and output a list of patients and patients’ clinical information, based on user-defined demographic data, medication list, and specific conditions.
• Calculate and electronically display quality measure results as specified by CMS or states.
• Electronically submit calculated clinical quality measures
• Electronically generate a patient reminder list for preventive or follow-up care according to patient preferences based on demographic data, specific conditions, and/or medication list.
• Implement automated, electronic clinical decision support rules (in addition to drug-drug and drug-allergy contraindication checking) according to specialty or clinical priorities that use demographic data, specific patient diagnoses, conditions, diagnostic test results and/or patient medication list.
• Automatically and electronically generate and indicate real-time, alerts and care suggestions based upon clinical decision support rules and evidence grade.
• Automatically and electronically track, record, and generate reports on the number of alerts responded to by a user.
• Electronically record and display patient records and connect with other providers
• Patient information: electronic copy upon request in 48 hours80%
• Patient access to electronic information (i.e. lab results) within 96 hours of availability10%
• Clinical summary of each patients’ insurance eligibility, and submit insurance eligibility queries to public or private insurers

All the major products do this in one way or another. This doesn’t make them easier to deploy or train staff on, or use. Or make the change management any easier (that’s the part I do).

However, this sounds very promising for both the patient and the physician. And it’s not part of health care reform legislation, it was part of the stimulus, so we know it’s going to happen.

Makes me remember when electronic claims processing came into widespread use — which was not until Medicare mandated sending them electronically in order for physicians to get paid. You’d be surprised how fast paper claims disappeared:-)

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We value and respect our HERWriters' experiences, but everyone is different. Many of our writers are speaking from personal experience, and what's worked for them may not work for you. Their articles are not a substitute for medical advice, although we hope you can gain knowledge from their insight.