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2. Issues for Discussion. Governor Doyle's Executive Order creating the eHealthcare Quality and Patient Safety BoardHealth Information Security and Privacy CollaborationFit with National Health Information Technology PrioritiesFit with Current Health Information Initiatives in our StateSignificance for Wisconsin .
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1. 1 eHealth Initiatives in Wisconsin Electronic HealthcareBringing it Home
Seth Foldy, MD, MPH, FAAFP
Medical College of Wisconsin
Susan Wood
eHealth Chief of Staff
Department of Health and Family Services
HIPAA COW Conference
September 29, 2006
2. 2 Issues for Discussion Governor Doyles Executive Order creating the eHealthcare Quality and Patient Safety Board
Health Information Security and Privacy Collaboration
Fit with National Health Information Technology Priorities
Fit with Current Health Information Initiatives in our State
Significance for Wisconsin
3. 3 Governor Doyles Executive Order Purpose - to improve the quality and safety of health care in Wisconsin
It creates a permanent eHealth Care Quality and Patient Safety Board
This Board will develop a plan for statewide use of electronic health records and exchange of information from these systems
This initiative is a key component of the Governors Affordability Agenda working to improve access and quality in our health care system and to address the economic impact of the current health care system
4. 4 A Public Private Enterprise The eHealth Board has 13 private sector and 7 public sector members
Chair is the Health Secretary in the Governor s Cabinet
The current role for government is to convene stakeholders, develop consensus on principles and standards, staff planning efforts, and represent the interests of public health and public sector purchasers
A wide range of private sector stakeholders are working to develop the Action Plan
5. 5 Five Year Action Plan The eHealth Board created five work groups to develop components of the plan:
Patient Care
Information Exchange
Consumer Interests
Governance
Finance
The Action Plan will be submitted to the Governor in December 2006 with recommendations to:
achieve statewide use of electronic health records and decision support systems at the point of patient care; and
provide a means for timely and appropriate exchange of data across medical settings
6. 6
7. 7 Progress Report Four work groups made preliminary reports to the eHealth Board August 3, 2006
The Governance group began meeting in August
Wonderful ideas and energy from work group participants
Commitment to transparency and engaging stakeholders
See all reports at the eHealth Board web site: http://ehealthboard.dhfs.wisconsin.gov/
8. 8 Health Information Security and Privacy Collaboration RTI awarded contracts awarded to 30+ states May 2006
Wisconsins proposal integrates work on the Privacy Project with the structure and processes being created for the eHealth Board
Wisconsin is eligible to receive the maximum funding per state of $350,000.
The funds will be used for staff costs in DHFS, for contractors to support these work activities and related meeting expenses
Staffing: About 12 people working part time on this project, staffing the four work groups required by the contract
9. 9 Privacy ProjectExpectations Assess variations in organization-level business policies and state laws that affect health information exchange in the state
Work closely with RTI, the National Governors Association and other states to exchange information and experiences regarding interoperable health information exchange barriers and best practices
Identify and propose practical solutions that protect privacy and security of health information and permit interoperable health information exchange;
10. 10 Expectations (cont.) Develop plans to implement solutions in the state and, if applicable, at the federal level.
Each state is also expected to work with health care professionals, patients and others to address privacy and security issues and identify solutions for broad application; and to manage the project according to RTI requirements.
The issues raised and solutions identified will set out a road map for Wisconsin in terms of eliminating barriers to health information exchange and provide a foundation for future work by the national agencies and facilitate health information exchange across the states
11. 11 eHealth and the Privacy Project One of the strongest early lessons were learning from our research on electronic health information is that some of the main challenges for adoption are not technical issues. Rather they are issues of inclusion and trust. This work on privacy and security will leave an indelible mark on the ultimate formulation of a national health information network.
Dr. Carolyn M. Clancy, Director of the Agency for Healthcare Quality and Research, announcing the grant awards
12. 12 eHealth and Privacy Project As part of its charge the Board is expected to identify options for serving consumer health information needs and insuring health information privacy and security in electronic health information exchange as it develops the Wisconsin Action Plan for Health Care Quality and Patient Safety.
The Wisconsin eHealth Board will serve as the Steering Committee for the HIPSC project - overseeing the activities of multiple working teams and linking their work with other key organizations especially HIPAA COW.
13. 13
14. 14 Where are we now? National context
The Wisconsin eHealth Action Plan process
Future vision
Discussion
15. 15 Motivation: Poor Access to Health Information 40% of outpatient prescriptions unnecessary
20% of lab & x-ray tests ordered because originals can not be found
18% medical errors from inadequate patient information.
Patients get only 54.9% of recommended care
49% of notifiable diseases reported
- B. Middleton PHIN 2005 Conference
16. 16 Motivation The Unsustainable Cost of Health Care $1.8 Trillion / Yr
15% of GDP ~ 2X OECD Median (8.5%)
18.7% GDP in 2014
Medicares Projected Deficit $27 Trillion (7x SS)
Unsustainable Growth Doubles Every 10 Years
- Health Spending Projections Office of the Actuary, CMS J Health Affairs 2005
-Health Spending in the US and the rest of the Industrialized World. J Health Affairs 2005
17. 17 Public Health Improvement Needs Linking clinical and community-based prevention is needed more than ever:
Wisconsins national health ranking dropped to 13th (from 9th in 2004) reflecting obesity, ? child poverty.
Since 1990 the prevalence of obesity soared by 105% - from 11.3% to 23.2% of the population
Wisconsins infant mortality rate was substantially worse for minorities
Our state ranked 23rd for cardiovascular deaths and 23rd for total mortality.
Challenges of early outbreak detection, disaster management, efficiency of public health case management, and uptake of public services
Source: Americas Health Rankings for 2005, United Health Foundation
18. 18 Annual costs of paper-shuffling in SE Wisconsin - $668 million, up to 900 lives
19. 19 Consumers Want Health IT
20. 20 Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT
Established by Executive Order 13335 (April 27, 2004)
Responsible for realizing the Presidents vision of Health IT:
Widespread adoption of interoperable EHR within 10 years
Medical information follows the consumer
Clinicians have complete, computerized patient information
Quality initiatives measure performance and drive quality-based competition
Public health and bioterrorism surveillance are seamlessly integrated into care Decade of Health Information Technology: Delivering Consumer-centric and Information-Rich Health Care
21. 21 US DHHS 10 Year Priorities
22. 22
23. 23 Aug. 8 2006 Stark Safe Harbor Stark Act exception rules to permit donations of electronic prescribing and EMR technology
Such donations must include interoperability
Issued by HHS CMS and OIG
May be superceded by legislation
24. 24 Executive Order Aug. 22, 2006 Federal health care programs (excl. Medicaid) use interoperability standards in own systems
Federal contractors ordered to use interoperability standards
Transparency of agencies and contractors in quality measurements & reporting
Transparency in prices
Implement quality & efficiency improvement including pay for performance
25. 25 Meanwhile, back in Wisconsin
26. 26
27. 27 What Are HIT versus HIE?
28. 28 HIE & HIT Perspectives
29. 29 HIE and HIT Perspectives (contd)
30. 30 What Is A RHIO?Regional Health Information Organization Non-Profit - Public / Private Electronic Health Record Data Exchange
Clinical Records Shared (Across Provider Systems) to Facilitate Care
31. 31 What is a Medical Trading Area?
32. 32 The Road Map Governor Doyle has asked the eHealth Board to identify:
existing eHealth resources including funding to support the development of a statewide eHealth information infrastructure
technology options
options for serving consumer health information needs
how best to insure privacy and security in electronic health information exchange
how to facilitate statewide adoption of EHR standards to enable statewide and national exchange
how best to create organizational and governance structures for a statewide eHealth information infrastructure
33. 33 Some draft ideas Encourage regional exchanges supported by statewide
Standards
Incentives
Policy
Infrastructure
Economies of scale
34. 34 Regional Exchanges Can Develop: Electronic result and document delivery
Improved information access
Reduced info mgmt. costs
Improved collaboration
Improved reporting of public health conditions
Improved communication with and between clinical partners
35. 35 Patient-centric (cross-organization)
Visit and diagnosis lists
Med, immunization and allergy lists
Test and result summaries
Support
Better care coordination
Better disease management
Reduced redundant costs
Improved care quality and safety
Early outbreak detection and disaster resource management
Regional Exchanges Can Develop:
36. 36
37. 37 Sample Recommendations Vendor agnostic
Use emerging national standards for interoperability
Enable patient access and management of personal health information
Incentivize, aid HIT implementation
Reduce restrictions on data exchange between treating clinicians
38. 38 Sample Recommendations Enable public health-oriented decision support
Patient-entered registration module
Distribute costs and benefits among stakeholders
Avoid rip & replace
Maintain existing data ownership
39. 39 Inventory of HIT/HIE in Wisconsin The Governors Executive Order requires an annual assessment of the adoption of health information technology by Wisconsin healthcare providers
Ambulatory survey
MetaStar and Seth Foldy collaborating
Survey of ambulatory practices, EDs, Outpatient Clinic EMR use
To be repeated annually, comparable to national statistics
Inpatient survey
Rural Wisconsin Health Cooperative and Gunderson Lutheran and Seth Foldy collaborating
Interview survey of hospital systems
Work toward annual survey with WHA in future
Health Information Exchange efforts inventory
MetaStar and Seth Foldy collaborating
40. 40 WI Health Information Exchange (WHIE)
Governance
Early funding
User management pilot
Business plan
Draft agreements
Projects
Emergency Department sharing
Results delivery
Medication list
41. 41 RHIO Development South Central WisconsinHealth Information Data Exchange
42. 42 Mapping Initiatives & Converging Agendas Work planned 2007-2011 coinciding with eHealth Action Plan
20+ initiatives
Includes:
Wisconsin Healthcare Quality Collaborative
Public Health Information Network
WEDSS electronic disease reporting
Child health systems
Wisconsin Health Information Organization
Wisconsin Immunization Registry and RECIN
PeriData Statewide Perinatal Database
Safety Collaboratives
Biosense
Region 7 EMSystem
Wisconsin Medical Society unified credentialing
This will be part of the eHealth Report
43. 43 Whats next?
The report from the eHealth Board will go to the Governor December 1, 2006
Once approved, implementation will begin
eHealth Board will sponsor an Implementation Summit at the Fluno Center in March 2007
Privacy Project will continue through March 2007 to complete all of its work.
How to track and influence developments
Participate in the HISPC work groups
Communicate your interests to the work group leaders
Monitor developments and react to proposals via the eHealth board web site:
http://ehealthboard.dhfs.wisconsin,gov
44. 44 Thank you! Seth Foldy sfoldy@sbcglobal.net
Susan Wood woodss@dhfs.state.wi.us
Collaborators: UW Population Health Institute, MetaStar
Funders: Wi DHFS, US-DHHS/ONC, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation, CDC, HRSA