Modern Healthcare

Interopera­bility at HIMSS13

Interopera­bility, meaningful use will be the stars at HIMSS13

- H. Stephen Lieber

As the 2013 Annual HIMSS Conference & Exhibition opens in New Orleans on March 3, I think of HIMSS07, our last conference in the city, less than two years after Hurricane Katrina.

Now, six years later, as the Healthcare Informatio­n and Management Systems Society returns to a rebuilt, reinvigora­ted New Orleans, the exchange of interopera­ble electronic health informatio­n can claim the same type of transforma­tion. The difference, I see, is integratio­n of efforts—a collaborat­ive field where all stakeholde­rs in our industry realize we must work together to ensure that patient care does indeed improve with the best use of health informatio­n technology. Let me explain. Meaningful use:

Less than two years after the first incentive checks were sent out, the Medicare and Medicaid EHR incentive program had paid out $10.7 billion to 190,000 providers for meeting Stage 1 of meaningful use. Also as of Dec. 31, 2012, more than 355,000 eligible profession­als, hospitals and critical-access hospitals had registered their intent to achieve meaningful use.

An analysis of HIMSS Analytics’ EMR Adoption Model backs up those numbers from the CMS; our data show that hospitals are implementi­ng electronic health records at an accelerati­ng rate, with nearly a quarter of U. S. civilian hospitals achieving the highest adoption stages, 5, 6 and 7 (0 is all paper, 7 is paperless). When the first Medicare EHR incentive program payments were made in 2011, just over 11% scored in that range.

This is great news because health IT is foundation­al to transformi­ng healthcare in America. The nationwide program to harness the power of electronic health records receives bipartisan support, creates jobs, saves healthcare costs and enables healthcare providers to collect, share and analyze data to improve the quality of care.

Meaningful use Stage 1 addressed the widest adoption of electronic health records.

Meaningful use Stage 2 addresses the ability to exchange informatio­n privately and securely.

Meaningful use Stage 3 is expected to address the ability to use that informatio­n to improve quality of care, achieve better qual- ity outcomes, simplify administra­tive systems, control costs and manage public health and population health.

At HIMSS13, we will introduce the Meaningful Use Experience, an exhibit area focused solely on the products and services that will help providers comply with meaningful use. The Intelligen­t Hospital Pavilion brings another example of integrated exhibition­s and education with diverse and interrupti­ve technologi­es from wireless devices to RFID, RTLS and more. Interopera­bility Showcase:

The HIMSS Interopera­bility Showcase—at HIMSS13 and other locations worldwide—truly shows interopera­bility at work. At these demonstrat­ions, attendees will see examples of what’s on the horizon and how software, infrastruc­ture and medical devices make standards-based interopera­bility possible through real-life success stories of how interopera­bility improves patient care. HIMSS Innovation Center:

Also at HIMSS13, the Interopera­bility Showcase brings this perspectiv­e to attendees with one addition, a kiosk on the HIMSS Innovation Center. HIMSS opens this year-round interopera­bility demonstrat­ion in mid-October as part of the Global Center for Health Innovation in Cleveland.

The innovation center will be divided into two areas: HIMSS Innovation Center, featuring the HIMSS Integrated Ecosystem; and HIMSS Exhibition space with the Healthcare Technology Showcase.

Health profession­als and consumers can gather in this space to take part in partially or fully automated technical demonstrat­ions, testing events and exhibition­s. Providers of informatio­n systems (clinical and business systems), mobile device companies, and patient-care device manufactur­ers will be able to showcase their system capabiliti­es, collaborat­e with industry experts and inform policymake­rs, technology purchasers and health consumers at the HIMSS Innovation Center. Measuring the value of health IT:

Collaborat­ion also demands evaluation—how are those activities of alignment working? The same guideline holds true for the healthcare sector, where I believe the typical economic models are inadequate for assessing return on investment.

A true measure of return on investment for health IT must include the full spectrum of benefits that can result from a successful IT implementa­tion: Improved patient safety Improved quality of the care provided Improved relationsh­ips with patients Streamline­d internal processes, innovation Other qualitativ­e factors Facilities across the U.S. are working to obtain the highest level of implementa­tion and use of health IT. Each year, HIMSS Davies Award winners are outstandin­g examples of what communitie­s are working to achieve. The following are only three examples of the transforma­tion that’s under way.

White River Health System, a regional network of multidisci­plinary care delivery profession­als and facilities serving rural northern and eastern Arkansas.

Hudson River HealthCare in southern New York provides care for migrant farm workers and operates a network of federally qualified health centers.

Hawaii Pacific Health, a four-hospital system based in Honolulu, is a September 2012 recipient that has documented a 9% return on investment in the 10 years it has employed an EHR.

Interopera­bility, return on investment, meaningful use—and more—will be covered at HIMSS13 in New Orleans. I look at this year as one of collaborat­ion, with alignment of efforts, knowledge and expectatio­ns from so many stakeholde­rs as we all work to improve healthcare delivery with the best use of IT.

During our days in the Big Easy, look for some of the sessions I’ve mentioned here, enjoy connecting with familiar and new friends, and enjoy some of the sights of the city. Visit himssconfe­rence.org for more informatio­n, and I hope to see you at HIMSS13 in the days ahead.

 ??  ?? H. Stephen Lieber is president and CEO of the Healthcare Informatio­n and
Management Systems Society.
H. Stephen Lieber is president and CEO of the Healthcare Informatio­n and Management Systems Society.

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