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Health Information Technology Summit August 23, 2007 Ramkota Hotel Sioux Falls, SD. Laurie Gill Deputy Secretary South Dakota Department of Health 600 East Capitol Avenue Pierre, SD 57501 605-773-3361 Laurie.gill@state.sd.us. Driving Force. Governor Rounds Health Care Commission
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Health Information Technology Summit August 23, 2007Ramkota HotelSioux Falls, SD
Laurie Gill Deputy Secretary South Dakota Department of Health 600 East Capitol Avenue Pierre, SD 57501 605-773-3361 Laurie.gill@state.sd.us
Driving Force • Governor Rounds • Health Care Commission • Electronic Health Record Subcommittee
Steering Committee • Doneen Hollingsworth, Co-Chair, South Dakota Department of Health • Deb Bowman, Co-Chair, South Dakota Department of Social Services • Dave Hewett, SD Association Healthcare Organizations • Dr. Stephen Schroeder, SD Foundation for Medical Care • John Porter, Avera • Kelby Krabbenhoft, Sanford Health • Dana Darger, Rapid City Regional • Kristie Fiegen, Junior Achievement of SD • Bill Nelson, Coteau des Prairies Hospital • Barb Smith, SD State Medical Association • Dr. Jim Reynolds, North Central Heart Institute • Dr. Charles Hart, Rapid City Regional Hospital • Dr. Jim Szana, Dentistry at the St. Charles • Otto Doll, Bureau of Information and Telecommunications
SDEHRA Goals • Assess variations in organization-level business policies and state laws that affect health information exchange (HIE) • Identify barriers and best practices relating to HIE • Identify privacy and security issues relating to HIE • Investigate HIE possibilities for South Dakota and surrounding region
Two-prong approach • Online surveys for payers, providers, and consumers • Over 350 received • 210 Consumers • 155 Providers • 2 Payers • Four regional focus groups • Rapid City, Aberdeen, Pierre, Sioux Falls • 75+ representatives from multiple disciplines
SDEHRA Participants • Clinicians • Physician Groups • Federal Health Facilities • Hospitals • Payers • Community Clinics • Pharmacies • Laboratories • Long-Term Care Facilities • Hospice • Correctional Facilities • Professional Associations • Consumer Organizations • Consumers • Etc.
Prepare to Share...Share for better Care! Kick-Off conference held in October. Laura Adams from the Rhode Island Quality Institute gave the keynote address. Over 100 participants around the state were a part of the conference. Presentation is available on the www.SDEHRA.org website.
Timeline • October 2006 • Kick Off Conference • November 2006 • Focus / Work Groups Designated • December 2006 • Survey Process Begins • January 2007 – March 2007 • Focus / Work Group Meetings • Surveys Finalized • April 2007 – June 2007 • Results Analyzed • Final Report Preparations • July 2007 • Final Report Issued • August 2007 • Health Information Technology Summit
SDEHRA Outcomes • South Dakota focused • “Prepare to Share, Share for Better Care” • Address barriers • Legal, Organizational-Level, Financial • Provide a roadmap for future IT initiatives in SD • Website – www.SDEHRA.org • Multiple resources including slides from today’s presentations are available
Dakota State University 820 North Washington Avenue Madison, SD 57042
Data Collection • Survey Instruments • Provider • Consumer • Payer • Focus Groups • Legal Analysis
Survey Development • Consumer Survey • AARP (national/state) • Payer Survey • SD Division of Insurance • Provider Survey • RHIO task force • Selected providers • Kick-Off Conference attendees
Survey Distribution • Email and newsletter announcements • SDAHO, SDHIMA, etc. • Letters to associations and providers • News releases (print, radio, television) • Television coverage • KSOO Viewpoint University Talkshow • Newspaper articles • Reminders • News releases • Postcards • Association newsletters
Does your facility currently have an electronic health record (EHR)?
What are the major barriers to your plans for implementation of an EHR?
Provider IT Infrastructure • 36% have redundancy hardware for information systems • 51% system provides redundancy (backup) of data • 86% facility systems are accessible with authentication • 87% facility’s employees use a unique user identifier to access their information systems • 100% main authentication method currently used is passwords • 60% employee training for password authentication and auditing to maintain password security • 69% facility-forced password changes • 77% physical access to computing resources by employees is NOT considered a barrier to increasing use of electronic records
Scenarios • Treatment/patient care • Payment • Regional health information organizations • Law enforcement • Prescription drugs • Operations/marketing • Public health/bioterrorism • Employee health information • State government oversight
Focus Group Assignment • Identify the issues of the scenario • Describe how the situation in the scenario was handled in their particular work setting • Describe the ideal practice standard • Identify barriers that could possibly prevent the ideal practice standard from occurring
Ideal Practice Recommendations • Easy, secure access to patient information • Interoperability (between computer systems) • Medication prescribing • Standardized regulations
Easy, secure access to patient information • Common patient identifier • Online patient authorization to release medical information • Use of a Continuity of Care Record (CCR) • Use of an EHR by all healthcare providers with a standardized format • Use of a Picture Archiving and Communication System (PACS) for easy access to all types of images • Use of a data repository • Automatic alert for reportable diseases • Access to information by third party payers for reimbursement only
Interoperability (between computer systems) • Universal or standardized formats • Use of a Computerized Physician Order Entry (CPOE) system by all healthcare practitioners
Medication prescribing • Online formulary list of all third party payers • Computerized alert system when ordering medications to prevent interactions, overdosing, etc.
Standardized regulations • Uniformity of laws between states • Federal laws do not conflict with state laws
Common Barriers Identified • Lack of resources • Technology issues • Legislation • Interoperability • Consumer issues
Lack of resources • Cost of • staff education and training • the need for specific knowledge of HIPAA regulations regarding Release of Information (ROI) in an emergency such as bioterrorism • time to train staff on new policies and procedures regarding the use of the EHR system and hardware • needed hardware • upgrading of hardware as technology and requirements change • needed software • maintaining support once implementation is complete
Technology issues • All facilities not utilizing the EHR, CPOE, PACS, etc. • Physician/staff resistance to new technology • Concern for security, confidentiality, and access • Password maintenance • Network maintenance • Planned and unplanned down time of the system • Unavailability of broad-band transmission in some areas
Legislation • State-to-state differing regulations • Conflict with federal and state laws • Ownership of the medical information • Legal medical record
Interoperability • Many EHR vendors and lack of interoperability between the systems • Lack of universal standards for different systems communicating with each other
Consumer issues • Consumer education • Internet availability in rural areas • Security and confidentiality concerns • Ability to opt out of a Regional Health Information Organization (RHIO)
Information Reviewed • SDHIMA Legal Manual • Focus Group Scenarios • Relevant journal and Law Review articles • Additional information from related websites
Findings • Current South Dakota statutes and administrative rules governing health information exchange need refining to better comply with federal HIPAA standards. • There is a need for plain English wording or interpretation to HIPAA compliance within South Dakota. Such a wording will help South Dakota physicians, hospitals, clinicians, insurers, researchers and managed care organizations limit the opportunity for legal and financial risk. • South Dakota should implement a system of balanced interests between patients and providers.