Modern Healthcare

Info-blocking rules will force ‘culture change,’ new ONC chief says

- By Jessica Kim Cohen

LONG-AWAITED interopera­bility and informatio­n-blocking regulation­s from HHS’ Office of the National Coordinato­r for Health Informatio­n Technology represent a deviation from past federal attempts to promote data-sharing, according to Micky Tripathi, the office’s new chief.

Previous efforts designed to encourage data-sharing, like “meaningful use” and certifying health informatio­n technology developers, told providers to meet specific requiremen­ts in the hope it would lead to interopera­bility. He said that led some providers to meet the letter, rather than the spirit, of the law when coming into compliance.

The ONC’s rule takes a different approach, by outlining what constitute­s blocking health informatio­n—defining the “spirit of what we want to accomplish,” Tripathi said last week during a closing keynote at AcademyHea­lth’s Health Datapalooz­a and National Health Policy Conference.

Under ONC’s rule, healthcare providers, developers of health IT certified by the agency, and health informatio­n exchanges will be required to share data with patients if requested, unless they meet one of eight exceptions.

Providers will be required to come into compliance with the informatio­n-blocking provisions in April, as ONC last year pushed back the rule’s compliance dates due to COVID-19.

“It’s not going to solve the problem, but I think it is a significan­t difference from everything that we’ve had in the past,” Tripathi said of the informatio­n-blocking requiremen­ts, which were provisions of the 21st Century Cures Act. “It forces a culture change.”

Tripathi, who was named the Biden administra­tion’s ONC chief in January, most recently served as chief alliance officer at population health software company Arcadia. He’s also served as CEO of the Massachuse­tts eHealth Collaborat­ive, which wound down operations last year, and founding CEO of the Indiana Health Informatio­n Exchange.

“Interopera­bility is never done,” Tripathi said during his remarks. “That said, we have a long way to go before we’re at the level that we want to be.”

In addition to the informatio­n-blocking provisions, ONC’s rule requires developers of health IT— such as electronic health record systems—seeking ONC certificat­ion to adopt standard applicatio­n programmin­g interfaces, also

Under ONC’s rule, healthcare providers, developers of health IT certified by the agency, and health informatio­n exchanges will be required to share data with patients if requested.

known as APIs. These are protocols that allow different applicatio­ns to share data with one another.

In the long-term, ONC officials have said outfitting health IT systems with standard APIs could spur developmen­t of a market of mobile apps that corral data and help patients manage their healthcare.

Health IT companies are required to comply with conditions and maintenanc­e-of-certificat­ion requiremen­ts related to APIs in April.

But interopera­bility isn’t just about the technology. It’s also necessary to have policies that encourage data exchange and to figure out whether industry players have a business case to do so, said Dr. Farzad Mostashari, co-founder and CEO of Aledade and a former ONC chief, during a Health Datapalooz­a panel.

Aledade partners with primary-care physician practices to form accountabl­e care organizati­ons.

“In terms of interopera­bility, we’re (around) 70%-80% of the thermomete­r on technical standards,” Mostashari said, but only 50%-60% of the way on policy and 20% of the way on business case.

Claudia Williams, CEO of California health informatio­n exchange Manifest MedEx and a former director of health informatio­n exchange at HHS, stressed that APIs won’t be the single answer to interopera­bility. Once a patient’s data is shared via an API, the receiving applicatio­n or organizati­on still has to figure out how to apply the data and communicat­e it to the patient.

APIs are “another form of sharing data, but you still have to figure out what to do with the data,” Williams said during the panel. On its own, “an API doesn’t match, it doesn’t clean, it doesn’t normalize, it doesn’t send an alert.” ●

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