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A collaborative bringing together Oregon's health safety net providers, CareOregon and the State of Oregon to develop and operate a management services organization as a community assetOCHIN's strategy is to create the same synery on a regional basis. . What is it?. Why OCHIN?. High-level information services, technical assistance, and administrative services become affordable when group purchasing power is maximized. The infrastructure of the health safety net can be significantly stabiliz1141
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1. Oregon Community Health Information Network
3. Why OCHIN?
High-level information services, technical assistance, and administrative services become affordable when group purchasing power is maximized. The infrastructure of the health safety net can be significantly stabilized by applying this principle creatively.
4.
Safety Net clinics failing in Oregon
Effects of the OHP – financial, political, adverse selection, and section 1115 waiver capping reimbursement below cost
Burning IT platforms
Market consolidation, Multnomah County Health Department legacy system
Little sense of community around the health safety net
Lack of State involvement
Isolated clinics, little collaboration
Many opportunities for shared services, few used What was the Environment?
5.
Little sense of community among safety net clinics
Sovereign independent agencies
Disparate business practices
Competition rather than collaboration, mutual benefit, common learning, best practices, etc.
Little State involvement and support of safety net e.g. section 1115 waiver actually penalized some community health centers Barriers
6. Evolution - Collaboration
7. Coherent health safety net utilizing shared strengths
Allow clinics to focus on and develop full potential rather than “Putting Out Fires” – Reactive and Proactive
Improved Health Demographics
Better understanding of vulnerable populations
Improved resource utilization
Improved health outcomes
Improved health policy What are our goals?
8. Who is Participating? Oregon Primary Care Association
Multnomah County Health Department
CareOregon
Oregon State Health, Health Planning, and Medicaid Agencies
Clackamas County Health Department
Tillamook County Health Department
Benton County Health Department
Virginia Garcia Memorial Health
Klamath Health Partnership
OCHOCO Family Health
Pike Street Medical Clinic - Washington
Santa Cruz - California
Federally Qualified Community Health Centers throughout Oregon
The Coalition of Community Clinics
9. Mission Mission:
“To further the cause of assuring access to necessary health services through collaboration among safety net health providers, in meeting common infrastructure needs”
Purpose:
OCHIN is an Administrative Services Organization. OCHIN exists to meet the need of the safety net community for quality information and management services. As a collaboration, OCHIN can provide these services more efficiently and effectively than would be possible by individual organizations.
10. OCHIN recognizes that individuals and participating organizations are vital members of the communities they serve.
OCHIN is an asset of the community clinics, agencies and funding organizations providing safety net health services.
OCHIN provides leadership in furthering the collective mission of the safety net system, assuring access to necessary and appropriate health services.
OCHIN is an independent body, governed by the needs of the participating organizations.
In participating in OCHIN, organizations agree to work toward goals, whose success will be
measured collectively.
OCHIN will serve as an effective steward of public funds.
OCHIN will serve as an effective steward of organization and client information.
OCHIN is supported through participant contributions.
OCHIN will work to accommodate participants with special needs.
OCHIN will foster a climate of mutual trust and respect among participating organizations.
OCHIN will respect the business needs of member organizations.
Values
11. Integrated Practice Management System
Common definitions and business practices
Customized for FQHC, Federal and State reporting
Significant investment in adequately training safety net users in scheduling, billing, registration and information analysis practice and theory
Common patient index across all partners
Shared/evolving library of management and business reports
Electronic submittal of Claims to;
OMAP, BCA, AHLERS, CYDATA, COHIS, CASCADE
Electronic Submittal of Statements to clearing house
Automatic notification of claims delivery and errors
Testing electronic remittance for OMAP
Note: OCHIN PM currently contains 380,000 unduplicated patient records
Current Services
12. Additional Services Electronic Medical Record
Integrated with Practice Management
EpicCare best health software per KLAS (HIMSS user Survey)
Currently writing a $4.8 M grant to begin process
Web Access (MyWeb) – Provider
Web Access (MyChart) – Client
Master Patient Index, Common for PM and EMR
Data Warehouse
First Phase – 380K unduplicated patient demographics
Second Phase – EMR adds information for statistical reporting of clinical information used in Federal, State and Local Health Dept. for Disease surveillance and Bio-Terrorism in near real-time.
13. Products in Development Centralized Billing
Grant proposal has been submitted
Better state-level health policy
Improve partnership with State & Federal agencies
Collaboration with Healthy Disparities Collaboratives (Pecs/Dems)
IRIS
Electronic Health applications including:
Online eligibility application and determination
Online Referrals
Online Consumer Health Information
14. Economies of Scale Practice Management
In next three years OCHIN Practice Management will double in volume and only increase cost by 30%. Per unit cost will therefore decrease by 35% per visit.
No single County is big enough to purchase EPIC. Collaboration between Counties and CHC’s enabled the OCHIN partners to buy EPIC, the highest quality health software package in the U.S.
Electronic Medical Record
In the next three years OCHIN plans to purchase EpicCare, Epic’s Electronic Medical Record (EMR) and implement it in many OCHIN organizations, including various County Health Departments.
15. How we decided on 'EPIC' Intense RPF/RFI process that included all possible partners of OCHIN
85% of the key consultants were certain Epic was the best fit
Our Core Group chose Epic as best strategic fit
Our OCHIN board and CareOregon concurred
16. Summer 2002
17. Fall 2002
18. Fall / Winter 2002-2003
19. Spring / Summer 2003Multnomah Role Out
20. Full control of access permission at System, Organization, Department, Application and Record Level.
Audit trails for add, change and delete of patient data.
Automatic session logout and expiration on idle time
Secure Session and “Break Glass” controls
Workstation to Server 128bit RC5 Encryption
All partners and OCHIN staff are filtered through the same firewall rules.
All network traffic is logged 7x24 to SQL database
Automatic notification of Alerts from firewalls, servers and databases
Claims submitted via 3DES VPN, HTTPS, SFTP and FTP(SSL)
HIPAA
21. Oregon Community Health Information Network Network Infrastructure and Security
22. Technology
23. Equipment
25. Minimum Client Requirements Thin Client / Terminal
Full Citrix ICA client 6.31.1051
Web ICA client 6.31.1051
Windows 9.x or Higher
Display 1024x768 @ 256 color
TCP/IP Protocol Winsock 2
Terminal support for ICA 6.0
Display 1024x768 @ 256 color Thick Client
Windows NT 4.0 or higher
Internet Explorer 5.0 or higher
PIII 800 or higher
128MB RAM (256MB Recommended)
Display 1024x768 @ 256 color
TCP/IP Protocol Winsock 2
60MB Free Disk Space for Application Files
20MB Free Disk Space for each Environment
26. Prerequisite Site Information TCP/IP Subnet Addresses for each Clinic
If an address space is already in use, OCHIN will assign a subnet for address translation.
Router Configuration, Maintenance and Outages are centrally managed by OCHIN.
Workstation Security Authorization
The NetBIOS name of an EPIC workstation has to be unique across all members.
An EPIC ID# will be assigned to each Workstation. This ID# is used to authorize access to the EPIC Databases.
On Citrix the NetBIOS name is mapped to the EPIC ID# to uniquely identify an access request.
Printer Information
TCP/IP Address, Manufacturer, Model.
An EPIC ID# will be assigned to each Printer.
All printers must be network connected.
Partners can choose to utilize a central LPD server (Unix, Windows w/Unix LPR)
27. Network Security
28. Workstation Security / Function
29. Contacts
Michael Leahy, OCHIN Executive Director
leahym@careoregon.org
503-416-1418
Abby Sears, OCHIN Project Director
searsa@careoregon.org
503-416-3646
Paul Matthews, OCHIN Network Architect
paulm@techeads.com
503-349-0120