Showing posts with label information technology. Show all posts
Showing posts with label information technology. Show all posts

Tuesday, September 29, 2009

Secretary Sebelius Releases $27.8 Million in Recovery Act Funds to Expand the Use of Health Information Technology

HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius today announced awards totaling $27.8 million to health center-controlled networks and large multi-site health centers to implement electronic health records (EHR) and other health information technology (HIT) innovations. The funds are part of the $2 billion allotted to HHS' Health Resources and Services Administration (HRSA) under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA) to expand health care services to low-income and uninsured individuals through its health center program.

"The increased use of health information technology is a key focus of our reform efforts because it will help to improve the safety and quality of health care generally while also cutting waste out of the system," Secretary Sebelius said.

"These funds to expand and upgrade electronic health records systems will make a huge difference for health centers struggling to provide health care to the growing number of people in need," said HRSA Administrator Mary Wakefield, Ph.D., R.N.

"Broad use of health information technology has the potential to improve health care quality, prevent medical errors, and increase the efficiency of care provision," added National Coordinator for Health Information Technology David Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.P. "This program supports the department's overall efforts to assist physicians and hospitals in adopting and becoming meaningful users of health information technology."

Eighteen grants totaling more than $22.6 million will support HER implementation. Grants totaling more than $2.6 million will help four grantees implement a variety of HIT innovations, including the creation of health information exchanges among different providers and the
incorporation of HIT at dental delivery sites. Another five grants totaling over $2.5 million will help health centers devise plans to use existing EHRs to improve patient health outcomes.

HRSA received $2 billion through the Recovery Act to expand health care services to low-income and uninsured individuals through its health center program. To date, more than $1.3 billion of these funds have been awarded to community-based organizations across the country.
HRSA-supported health centers treated 17 million patients in 2008, 40 percent of whom have no health insurance.

In addition, HRSA received $500 million in Recovery Act workforce funds --$300 million to expand the National Health Service Corps (NHSC) and another $200 million for other health care workforce programs. The NHSC funds will pay for student loan repayments for primary care medical, dental, and mental health clinicians who will practice for a minimum of two years in NHSC sites that treat underserved and uninsured people. Recently, awards totaling $33 million -- part of the $200 million total were announced to expand the training of health care professionals.

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Monday, April 6, 2009

Federal Health Architecture Delivers Free, Scalable Solution Helping Organizations Tie Health IT Systems into the NHIN

The Federal Health Architecture is making software available as a first
step to help public and private health information technology systems
communicate to the Nationwide Health Information Network (NHIN), a
federal initiative to facilitate the electronic exchange of health
information. The Federal Health Architecture, an E-Gov initiative led
by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology (ONC), is making this free software, called CONNECT, and
supporting documentation available at www.connectopensource.org.

The ONC has facilitated development of the NHIN, which will tie together
health information exchanges, integrated delivery networks, pharmacies,
government health facilities and payors, labs, providers, private payors
and other stakeholders into a "network of networks." The NHIN provides a
mechanism for previously disconnected systems and exchanges to connect
to each other and share data. The NHIN uses interoperability standards
recognized by the Secretary of Health and Human Services, as well as
public and private sector specifications, participation agreements and
policies. To enable health information exchanges over the NHIN, the ONC
is working to develop the necessary governance processes and legal
framework for participation in the network.

"This software will strengthen our health systems' ability to share data
electronically and provide a wide range of benefits to citizens," said
Robert Kolodner, M.D., National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology. "Benefits include up-to-date records available at the point
of care; enhanced population health screening; and being able to collect
case research faster to facilitate disability claims, as demonstrated by
transfers of information already underway between the Social Security
Administration and MedVirginia, a regional health information
organization."

The CONNECT software is the outcome of a 2008 decision by more than 20
federal agencies to connect their health IT systems to the NHIN. Rather
than individually building software required to make this possible, the
federal agencies, through the Federal Health Architecture, created
CONNECT. This shared software solution can be used by each agency within
its own environment. CONNECT implements the core services defined by the
NHIN including standards for security to protect health information when
it is exchanged with other trusted health organizations.

The agencies built CONNECT using open source components, and will make
it available under an open source license in order to encourage
innovation and to keep costs low. CONNECT will be available to the
entire health care industry, which is expected to speed NHIN adoption
among health care organizations.

"Federal agencies accomplished something remarkable in developing
CONNECT. They looked beyond their individual needs to the needs of the
group as a whole, and they collectively built a solution that provides
benefit to all involved much faster and at a significantly reduced cost
than if they had worked independently," said Dr. Kolodner. "Not only did
the agencies deliver a valuable product for use in the federal
government, CONNECT is now an option for any public or private sector
organization that wants to use the solution in the future to tie into
the Nationwide Health Information Network when it goes into full
production."

The Department of Defense, the Department of Veterans Affairs, the
Social Security Administration (SSA), the Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention, the Indian Health Service, and the National Cancer
Institute have tested and demonstrated CONNECT's ability to share data
among one another and with private sector organizations. In February
2009, the CONNECT software gateway was used for the first time in a
limited production environment when the SSA began receiving live patient
data from MedVirginia through the NHIN.

"Delivering CONNECT has been an enormous project, and we still have a
lot of work to do to move us to large-scale production usage. But with
the support of the federal agencies and industry, we can accomplish the
lofty health IT goals set at the national level," commented the Federal
Health Architecture's program director Vish Sankaran.

Private and public sector organizations can download CONNECT and use it
for their connectivity needs. As with other open source solutions,
organizations are encouraged to modify and expand the capabilities of
the software. Although the download is free, an organization opting to
use the solution should be aware it will be responsible for costs
associated with its implementation and maintenance within its own
environment.

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