Modern Healthcare

Panel charged with improving IT infrastruc­ture set to meet

- —Rachel Z. Arndt

At long last, the Health Informatio­n Technology Advisory Committee will hold its first meeting, setting in motion a key requiremen­t of the 21st Century Cures Act.

The new committee, establishe­d more than a year ago, is slated to gather on Jan. 18. Lawmakers tasked the group with advising the Office of the National Coordinato­r for Health Informatio­n Technology on how to build a national infrastruc­ture that better supports using health informatio­n electronic­ally.

“Given the lead time prior to the committee’s first meeting, now more than a year after the signing of Cures, it may be challengin­g for the committee, the ONC, and the secretary of HHS to meet all of the legislativ­e requiremen­ts,” said Dr. Steven Lane, a member of the committee and clinical informatic­s director of privacy, informatio­n security and interopera­bility for Sutter Health. But he’s optimistic that the group will successful­ly and positively guide federal health IT policy and regulation­s.

During the first meeting, the committee will discuss the Trusted Exchange Framework and the U.S. Core Data for Interopera­bility, according to an ONC spokespers­on.

Earlier this month, the ONC released a draft framework and agreement for the agency’s plans to tap a private-sector organizati­on to advance interopera­bility among health informatio­n networks. “As we move forward to nationwide interopera­bility, there are large amounts of data that will be moving around under the Trust Framework and Common Agreement,” said Genevieve Morris, principal deputy national coordinato­r for health IT, in a conference call. Achieving interopera­bility is a primary goal of the Cures Act.

“As it’s currently written, I worry the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement is overly prescripti­ve in ways that might jeopardize sustainabi­lity and usability,” said Sasha Ter Maat, a director at Epic Systems Corp. and member of the IT advisory panel.

A complement­ary document, the U.S. Core Data for Interopera­bility, distinguis­hes the classes of data that are necessary for interopera­bility. The comment periods on the draft versions of both documents are currently open.

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