New Haven Register (New Haven, CT)

As pandemic wears on, Conn. to launch health info exchange

- By Jenna Carlesso CTMIRROR. ORG

This fall, after more than a decade of false starts, shifting plans and millions of dollars spent, Connecticu­t will launch its statewide health informatio­n exchange, a single repository of medical data that can be accessed by any provider involved in a patient’s care.

The long-anticipate­d system is arriving at a critical time: the need for up-to-the-minute, robust patient informatio­n has become more pressing as COVID-19 continues its grisly march through the state. The exchange is designed to reduce duplicativ­e services, prevent medical errors and improve care.

But even as the move is regarded as an important step forward, leaders of the most recent push to form the network have been frustrated with the pace of progress. Three previous attempts collapsed in failure, leaving Connecticu­t without an all-inclusive, data sharing system when the pandemic hit last winter.

Meanwhile, other states have used their informatio­n exchanges, known as HIEs, to trace outbreaks in nursing homes, to identify COVID-19 hotspots in communitie­s, to analyze data on race and ethnicity and to help agencies, like public health department­s and regional health districts, access more extensive patient informatio­n in the midst of an emergency.

“I just wonder how many people could have been saved, had we

had this up and running,” said Allan Hackney, Connecticu­t’s health informatio­n technology officer, who is in charge of the latest effort to create an HIE here. “How many health care workers could have avoided burnout if we had this data? I get very frustrated.”

During a medical seminar over the summer, Hackney watched as his counterpar­ts in Rhode Island and Maine dazzled with demonstrat­ions of real-time COVID-19 data.

“They were showing live graphs of informatio­n on what’s happening with COVID in counties and towns, by zip code, by age,” he recalled. “Then we get to Connecticu­t – and yes, we have some reporting we’re pretty happy with – but the data is coming in whenever it comes in, and the robustness of it is not even in the ballpark of what I saw from Maine and Rhode Island. They’ve had HIEs for a long, long time.”

The exchange will allow health practition­ers to get fuller patient medical histories. If a woman receives a coronaviru­s test at a physician’s office in New Haven and walks into an emergency room in Putnam a week later, the hospital doctors could view her results, along with any underlying conditions she may have. The system gathers data from physician practices, laboratori­es, hospitals, radiology offices and community organizati­ons, giving providers a comprehens­ive look at a patient’s background.

Informatio­n about immunizati­ons and advanced directives, which have taken on fresh significan­ce during the pandemic, are also expected to be included in Connecticu­t’s HIE.

“We’ve had to piece together public data, private data, data from the Connecticu­t Hospital Associatio­n, and other informatio­n to understand what’s going on,” said Max Reiss, a spokesman for Gov. Ned Lamont. “Tools like this prevent that time from being wasted. It would have been easier … to have something like this in place seven months ago.”

Since coronaviru­s took hold in the state, Hackney has pondered how things might have been different if officials had managed to get the system online sooner. More than 4,500 people have died of COVID-19 here.

The network is expected to launch in November.

“Connecticu­t would have been in a lot better place if we had an operating HIE,” Hackney said. “It kills me that we’re in this situation.”

‘We were made for a time like this’

Connecticu­t is one of the last states in the nation to launch a broad health informatio­n exchange.

Some states have a single network that serves all residents. Others, like Texas and California, have several regional HIEs that cover different pockets of the state. And a handful have started the networks but run into problems, forcing them to dissolve the systems and start over.

With the ability to aggregate data, HIEs have played a key role in disaster response efforts during floods, fires and hurricanes. Since COVID-19 moved into the country, the systems are being used to support contact tracing, track trends and direct resources.

“There’s one example in Oklahoma, where by looking at zip code data, they were able to identify a particular nursing home where there was an outbreak. And by working with the nursing home, they identified the person who brought COVID-19 into the home,” said Tom Reavis, a spokesman for the Strategic Health Informatio­n Exchange Collaborat­ive, a trade associatio­n representi­ng about 80 HIEs nationwide. “They gave valuable informatio­n for public health.”

At least three informatio­n exchanges – in Nebraska, Pennsylvan­ia and Oklahoma – created dashboards during the pandemic that corral COVID-19 data from across the state into one place.

“A Pennsylvan­ia HIE, KeyHIE, has a dashboard where you literally can see, county by county, hour by hour, what the situation is looking like there,” Reavis said.

Indiana’s HIE worked with the state and Indiana University to form a new initiative that shares informatio­n on social determinan­ts of health, such as food access and housing stability, with researcher­s and health care providers who are dealing with COVID-19.

An HIE in Tallahasse­e, Fla., developed a system allowing practition­ers to view medical records from health plans, hospitals, urgent clinics, public health department­s and other entities across the state.

In Delaware, which launched the country’s first statewide health informatio­n exchange in 2007, HIE officials are working with state agencies to fill in gaps in patient data.

“When somebody has gone to, let’s say, one of these pop-up testing sites at a Walgreens or some other location, they don’t always fill out their informatio­n clearly,” said Randall Farmer, chief operating officer of the Delaware Health Informatio­n Network. “They don’t always include all the informatio­n that would be helpful from a public health standpoint. So our governor’s office came to us and asked: Can you guys help enrich some of this missing informatio­n?”

“If somebody forgot to put in their ethnicity, and we have that informatio­n from a previous record on a patient, we’re able to enrich that so the state can see if there’s a disparate impact on a particular community,” he said.

Nevada’s HIE has a similar strategy with some of the regional health districts. The districts gather informatio­n on reportable diseases and conduct syndromic surveillan­ce, a method of analyzing data to detect or anticipate an outbreak.

“When the pandemic hit, they realized they didn’t have much informatio­n on the COVID-positive patients and what their comorbidit­ies and other issues were,” said Michael Gagnon, executive director of HealtHIE Nevada, a nonprofit organizati­on that runs the statewide health informatio­n exchange.“So they were having a hard time figuring out, did this person really die of COVID? Or did COVID just exacerbate something else, but they died of a heart attack?”

The HIE helped supplement hospital data that the health districts already obtained with informatio­n from a patient’s primary care physician, lab results and other records.

“They were thrilled, because they didn’t have this kind of clinical informatio­n on their patients to do statistica­l monitoring and all their analytics,” Gagnon said. “They were flying blind a little bit.”

Having robust patient data has been crucial. Since the pandemic began, several HIEs are coordinati­ng directly with public health officials, providers and laboratori­es to boost awareness of cases and community transmissi­on. They are also analyzing patient informatio­n to track the disease’s progressio­n.

“Right now, in public health reporting, it’s episodic data – how many COVID tests were done, how many positive results came back, how many people are staying in ICU beds. But it’s not patientide­ntified informatio­n, so it doesn’t give you any sense of trajectory,” said Dr. Donald Rucker, national coordinato­r for health informatio­n technology. “You’re not able to see how patients do over a time span – what’s the amount of time between somebody testing positive and then developing some immunity, what’s the rate that people get re-infected, or what’s the time course of going from a nursing home to a hospital. For that, you need to be able – in a privacy-protected way – to follow patients over time.”

Longitudin­al health records – patients’ medical records spanning the course of their lifetimes – that are included in HIEs make analyzing those developmen­ts easier.

Swift access to patient informatio­n also reduces the burden on the provider. It can be time consuming for a specialist, for example, to track down X-rays, lab results or records of an emergency room visit from practition­ers in different networks. HIEs have helped cut through some of those cumbersome steps – an especially useful tool during a public health emergency.

“This is the power of HIEs. We were made for a time like this,” said Kelly Hoover Thompson, chief executive officer of the Strategic Health Informatio­n Exchange Collaborat­ive. “I’ve been watching Connecticu­t for a while, and there’s such a missed opportunit­y there.”

Preparing to launch

Before its latest effort, Connecticu­t made three unsuccessf­ul attempts to form a statewide health informatio­n exchange.

The first bid started in 2007 with a plan to build a network for Medicaid patients. But most physicians had not yet switched to electronic health records, so the state’s medical profession­als weren’t ready for it.

A second attempt in 2011 – through the Department of Public Health and a quasi-public group called the Health Informatio­n Technology Exchange CT (HITECT) – got off to a stronger start but was mired in a legal battle and later folded. HITE-CT had developed no means of generating income and no one was interested in the product it contracted with an outside vendor to create. The vendor filed claims for millions in unpaid invoices and sued for noncomplia­nce of the contract. HITECT dissolved in 2014, but the state was still responsibl­e for paying off more than $7 million it owed on a loan.

The third venture was overseen by the Department of Social Services and lasted 10 months, beginning in 2016. That effort also centered on Medicaid-based initiative­s, while larger plans for a statewide HIE were left for those who spearheade­d the fourth – and most recent – attempt in 2017. That was when Hackney, Connecticu­t’s health informatio­n technology officer, started his work.

But before Hackney even began, the state had spent at least $18 million on projects that failed to produce an HIE. For the last three years, Hackney has focused on engaging stakeholde­rs and the public, working with an advisory group and tackling priorities one at a time. The latest effort is being overseen by the nonprofit Health Informatio­n Alliance.

In May, Connecticu­t’s exchange, named Connie, signed its first client – CTHealthLi­nk – a network run by the Connecticu­t State Medical Society that serves a series of physician practices. Legal agreements with other health systems are in the works. Hackney originally had envisioned going live in March or April, but the pandemic caused delays.

With so many different health networks already operating their own electronic records systems, bringing everyone together is expected to take time. The larger networks, like Hartford HealthCare and Yale New Haven Health, will pull in many practices and patients at once. But some systems are more complicate­d. One physician network in Connecticu­t runs more than 50 different electronic medical records systems across

200 doctors’ offices. Integratin­g those is trickier, Hackney said.

Health care practition­ers are required to participat­e in the HIE. By law, hospitals and laboratori­es have one year to sign up once the exchange is deemed operationa­l. Other providers have two years. The state has set up a secure email system so medical personnel who don’t have access to the right technology can communicat­e with the HIE until the infrastruc­ture is in place. Funding is available for providers who need help connecting to the exchange.

Hackney said it could take two to three years to get everyone fully on board.

About $48 million has been set aside for the project, with 10 percent of that covered by the state and federal funds making up the rest. Officials estimated that just over $20 million has been spent so far. HIE organizers are required to use the remainder of the federal money by September 2021.

Hackney and others must come up with a way to sustain the system beyond next year. Along with additional federal support, they expect to pursue private sector contributi­ons.

The state is still crafting rules about privacy. Many HIEs have a so-called “opt-out” system, meaning patient data will be shared across the network unless a patient opts out. Only a handful of HIEs still have an “opt-in” system, in which data can’t be shared unless a patient consents. Leaders of health informatio­n exchanges say the opt-in policies are time consuming and unnecessar­y, since 95 percent or more of patients in those states end up opting in.

Hackney said Connecticu­t’s Office of Health Strategy is working on a policy that would follow the opt-out system. It will be subject to a regulatory process.

As the launch approaches, several providers said they are looking forward to the broader exchange of informatio­n.

John Brady, vice president and chief financial officer for the Connecticu­t Hospital Associatio­n, said the state’s acute care hospitals already have been coordinati­ng with one another to share resources and report informatio­n daily during the pandemic, but the HIE will allow more providers to access patient data.

The associatio­n has its own electronic records system, PatientPin­g, which provides notificati­ons of where a patient has been seen and what the primary diagnosis was at the time. But the system lacks complete provider notes, tests and labs, and doesn’t communicat­e with all medical providers in the state.

“There is robust data exchange and sharing capabiliti­es on the part of hospitals in Connecticu­t already,” Brady said. “We think the HIE can and should focus on getting the providers connected who are not currently involved or who don’t have the ability to exchange data. That will help facilitate telehealth and coordinate care.”

The HIE is also expected to assist state agencies in pinpointin­g hotspots across zip codes and neighborho­ods.

“Right now with the pandemic, we are working with the Department of Public Health to look at where the hotspots are according to the data they collect,” said Kimberly Martone, deputy director of the Office of Health Strategy. “But the data is very limited. When we look at the number of hospital beds in a certain area, we’re able to see increases in the average length of stay, along with discharge data. But ideally, you want to be able to look at the specific population­s in an area and the needs of that population. What diseases – especially chronic diseases – are in that area that we could address?”

In the early days of the most recent push to form an HIE, organizers were met with resistance and frustratio­n. Years of failure around the initiative had fueled deep skepticism among some providers.

Part of the project’s success was winning back that support, Hackney said.

“When I think back to where I started, we went to do outreach and it was, ‘What the heck is the state doing? Why did you let this stuff linger?’ People were angry,” he said. “Now they have come around. They’re motivated. They want this thing to work.”

 ?? Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org ?? Allan Hackney, health informatio­n technology officer, has a meeting online while working from home. Hackney is in charge of overseeing efforts to build and launch the statewide health informatio­n exchange.
Yehyun Kim / CTMirror.org Allan Hackney, health informatio­n technology officer, has a meeting online while working from home. Hackney is in charge of overseeing efforts to build and launch the statewide health informatio­n exchange.

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