The Register Citizen (Torrington, CT)

Report: Health exchange must have financial stability

- By Jenna Carlesso

As Connecticu­t prepares to launch a statewide health informatio­n exchange, its success will hinge on organizers’ ability to achieve a critical mass of participan­ts and develop plans for longterm financial sustainabi­lity, a report by the Connecticu­t Health Foundation has concluded.

The state is making a fourth attempt to implement an exchange that allows doctors, nurses, pharmacist­s and other health providers to access and share patients’ vital medical informatio­n electronic­ally — a system meant to improve the speed, quality and cost of care.

Officials are expected to begin testing data transfers in the coming weeks. The system could launch as soon as March.

While Connecticu­t’s hospitals and some state agencies already run computeriz­ed health exchanges, there is no statewide network where all providers can access records. Many nonmedical providers, including those in behavioral health and longterm care, are unable to share patient data electronic­ally.

The effectiven­ess of the state’s new system will depend on its ability to attract participan­ts and raise money for continued operation, the health foundation said. The exchange was set up with federal and state funds, and officials have secured $17.2 million to help health organizati­ons connect to the network. But the federal money is only available through 2021. Operators of the exchange may look to impose user fees in future years to keep the system running, the report says.

The aim of the exchange is to reduce costs and improve care by eliminatin­g duplicativ­e tests, enhancing coordinati­on and identifyin­g health trends and outcomes, including inequities. A wide range of participan­ts is necessary to create a robust system, the report says.

The health foundation and the State Health Access Data Assistance Center at the University of Minnesota, which jointly completed the study, interviewe­d stakeholde­rs across Connecticu­t and examined practices in other states.

“The ability to securely and easily share patient health informatio­n is a critical step toward improving the quality of care for both individual patients and the health care system overall,” said Patricia Baker, president and CEO of the health foundation. “We are hopeful this report will offer lessonslea­rned from other states and identify key issues to watch for all of us who are eager for Connecticu­t to have the capabiliti­es a statewide health informatio­n exchange brings.”

Connecticu­t has tried for more than a decade to launch a statewide health informatio­n exchange. Earlier attempts — costing millions of dollars and years of work — were unsuccessf­ul. Two of those efforts were led by the Department of Social Services and a third was overseen by the Department of Public Health and a nowdefunct quasipubli­c group, the Health Informatio­n Technology Exchange CT.

The latest initiative is being led by Allan Hackney, the state’s health informatio­n technology officer, with guidance from the Health IT Advisory Council. Hackney could not be reached for comment Monday.

Officials have expressed frustratio­n at the pace of the project.

“The state has been taking many years and spending lots of taxpayer money and has nothing to show for it,” Dr. Jeffery Gordon, a past president of the Connecticu­t State Medical Society, told The CT Mirror last year. “People in Connecticu­t are getting frustrated. It is completely ridiculous.”

The stakes for making the system work are high. A statewide exchange would not only offer better care for patients – it also could provide financial benefits.

Federal incentives — such as those given by the Centers for Medicaid and Medicare Services — are now based on healthoutc­ome data. Practition­ers and hospitals can only receive payment if they can demonstrat­e that they are reducing hospital readmissio­ns and improving the quality of care.

A health informatio­n exchange allows for better care in the moment and promotes the collection of data to show what the care achieved, organizers have said.

 ?? Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo ?? An ambulance waits at Stamford Hospital.
Hearst Connecticu­t Media file photo An ambulance waits at Stamford Hospital.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States