1 / 19

Putting the Meaning into “Meaningful Use”

Putting the Meaning into “Meaningful Use”. Joshua Seidman, PhD Acting Director, Meaningful Use Office of Provider Adoption Support Office of the National Coordinator for HIT. A Seasonal View of Meaningful Use. A Seasonal View of Meaningful Use. Grass. Meaningful Use of Grass.

kelii
Télécharger la présentation

Putting the Meaning into “Meaningful Use”

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Putting the Meaning into “Meaningful Use” Joshua Seidman, PhD Acting Director, Meaningful Use Office of Provider Adoption Support Office of the National Coordinator for HIT

  2. A Seasonal View of Meaningful Use

  3. A Seasonal View of Meaningful Use Grass Meaningful Use of Grass

  4. A Personal View on Meaningful Use……Because Getting to MU Can Be a Painful (But Rewarding) Experience 2010 Boston Marathon Meaningful Use of Running Shoes Running Shoes

  5. Getting to Meaningful Use……To Improve Health & Health Care PRACTICE REDESIGN TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION • OUTCOMES • Better Health • Transformed Care Delivery • Reduce Health Disparities MEANINGFUL USE HEALTH INFORMATION EXCHANGE CONSUMER ENGAGEMENT

  6. Staging of “Meaningful Use” • HITECH goals • Not about technology • Improving health and transforming health care through meaningful use of HIT Stage 3 Focus of: Stage 2 Stage 1

  7. Framework: HIT Policy Committee’s Recommended Five Priorities Improve quality, safety, efficiency and reduce health disparities Engage patients & families in their health care Improve care coordination Improve population and public health Ensure adequate privacy & security protections for personal health information

  8. …Time to GetMUVing Getting There…

  9. Meaningful Use Vanguard Cohort (MUVers) MUVers will be role models and practices of excellence Early adopters and thought leaders Provide input in evaluation of achievement of Stage 1 MU objectives MUVers can be a testing ground for other initiatives –e.g., PCMHs

  10. POSITION FOR PCMH, ACOs, OTHER HEALTH REFORM INNOVATIONS

  11. Thinking Long-Term AboutMeaningful Use

  12. Stage 2 MU Development Process

  13. HIT Policy Committee MU Workgroup: Patient/Family Engagement Hearing • Public hearing held April 20 • FACA (Federal Advisory Committee) blog • 50+ comments • Input accepted at http://healthit.hhs.gov/blog/faca/ • Part of planning trajectory for evolution of MU definition (Stages 2 & 3)

  14. Themes Emerging from Hearing & Blog • Provide real-time patient access to data • Incorporate patient-generated data into EHR • Encourage innovation • Connect home/community to care delivery settings • Consider a bold initiative (e.g., 50% of care rendered at home) • Create sense of community among patients & with health team • Achieve 4 Es: engage, educate, empower, and enable • Meet needs of diverse population • Focus more on patient outcomes measures • vs. traditional process measures • Engage with the public about MU • Consider re-orienting MU criteria to what's meaningful to patients

  15. June 4 HITPC/MU WG HearingFocused on Health Disparities • Using HIT to reduce disparities • Focus on solutions • Three panels • Health literacy & data collection • Culture (includes language) • Access — to: • Health care • Health information • Technology

  16. Agenda Overview Panel 1: Health Literacy & Data Collection • Moderator: Neil Calman • Sara Czaja, University of Miami • Cynthia Solomon, MiVia • Gena Wilson, The Institute for Family Health [invited] • Silas Buchanan, The Cave Institute Panel 2: Culture • Moderator: Joshua Seidman • Russell Davis, National Health IT Collaborative for the Underserved • M. Chris Gibbons, Johns Hopkins Urban Health Institute • Dianne Hasselman, Center for Health Care Strategies • Deena Jang, Asia/Pacific Islander American Health Forum Panel 3: Access • Moderator: George Hripcsak • Carolyn Clancy, Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality, HHS • Howard Hays, MD, Indian Health Service, HHS • Ian Erlich, Maniilaq Association, Alaska [invited] • R. Scott Hawkins, Boston Healthcare for the Homeless • Cesar Palacios, Proyecto Salud Clinic

  17. Questions to Panelists • What are greatest risks of HIT implementation in increasing disparities? • What innovations can prevent these risks? • What research can guide HIT implementers? • What patient/family engagement strategies can help support future MU of HIT? • How can MU of HIT reduce disparities? • What HIT applications can improve literacy, access, cultural relevance of health info?

  18. Some Strategies to Pursue • Ignoring technology not a viable strategy • Ethnographic observation to identify needs • Meet people where they are • EHR-generated data to tailor health info • Implications of making chart patient-accessible  Changing what clinicians record • Translation of clinical & administrative data • Multimedia: Not only text-based health info • Interactive approaches

  19. Engaging with ONC in Blogosphere & Twittersphere Health IT Buzz • http://healthit.hhs.gov/blog/onc/ Federal Advisory Committee Hearings • http://healthit.hhs.gov/blog/faca/ Real-Time Updates on Twitter • https://twitter.com/ONC_HealthIT

More Related