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The Transformation of Health and Health Care The Role of the NHII

The Transformation of Health and Health Care The Role of the NHII. John Lumpkin, M.D., M.P.H., Senior Vice President, Director of Health Care Group Robert Wood Johnson Foundation June 10, 2003. IOM Panel Reports November 2002. “The American health care system is confronting a crisis.”

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The Transformation of Health and Health Care The Role of the NHII

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  1. The Transformation of Health and Health CareThe Role of the NHII John Lumpkin, M.D., M.P.H., Senior Vice President, Director of Health Care Group Robert Wood Johnson Foundation June 10, 2003

  2. IOM Panel ReportsNovember 2002 • “The American health care system is confronting a crisis.” • “The health care delivery system is incapable of meeting the present, let alone the future, needs of the American public.”

  3. “Perfect Storm” Forming Around Health and Health Care • 41 Million + Uninsured in America • Health Care Costs Rapidly Rising • Those Covered Paying More for Their Coverage and More Out-of-Pocket • State Budget Crises Threatening Coverage • Quality is not a given • Public Health System is Stressed • Seeking Health Information is a Major Internet Task

  4. 2.5 2.0 1.5 Number of Visits to Cardiologists 1.0 0.5 R2 = 0.49 0.0 0.0 2.5 5.0 7.5 10.0 12.5 15.0 Number of Cardiologists per 100,000 Capacity Determines Need? Jack Wennberg Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care

  5. 400 All Medical Conditions R2 = 0.54 350 300 250 Discharge Rate 200 150 100 Hip Fracture R2 = 0.06 50 0 1.0 2.0 3.0 4.0 5.0 6.0 Acute Care Beds Capacity Determines Need? Jack Wennberg Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care

  6. 2.0 1.66 1.6 1.38 1.18 1.2 1.04 1.03 0.98 1.00 1.00 1.00 1.00 0.99 0.97 Ratio to Lowest Spending Region 0.8 0.4 0.0 Medicare Reimbursements Effective Care Preference-Sensitive Care (Discretionary Surgery) What does Greater Per Capita Spending BUY?not more effective or preference sensitive care More than 15% Below Average Jack Wennberg Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care 0-15% Below Average 0-15% Above Average More than 15% Above Average

  7. More than 15% Above Average (36) 0 - 15% Above Average (68) 0 - 15% Below Average (112) More than 15% Below Average (90) Not Populated Medicare Reimbursements (Part A and B) in Relation to the National Average (2000) Jack Wennberg Dartmouth Atlas of Health Care

  8. Quality of Health Care in US?? • Overall Care 54.9% • Preventive 54.9% • Acute 53.4% • Chronic 56.1% • History 43.4% • Counseling or Ed 18.3% • Immunization 65.7% Elizabeth McGlynn, et al NEJM June 26, 2003 348:26

  9. The focus must shift from blaming individuals for past errors to a focus on preventing future errors by designing safety into the system To Err is Human - Institute of Medicine

  10. 9.0 8.0 7.0 6.0 5.0 Back Surgery (1999-2000) 4.0 3.0 2.0 1.0 Black Non-Black Back Surgery per 1,000 Medicare Enrollees on a Race-Specific Basis (1999-2000)

  11. A. Sehgal- JAMA 2003;289:996-1000

  12. Current practice depends upon the clinical decision-making capacity and reliability of autonomous individual practitioners, for classes of problems that routinely exceeds the bounds of unaided human cognition Daniel R. Masys, M.D. 2001 IOM Annual Meeting

  13. “We have wonderful technology, but some grocery stores have better technology than our hospitals and clinics.” Secretary Tommy Thompson Chicago Medical School Commencement June 7, 2002

  14. We stand on the “tipping point” of the rapid enhancement of the health care system into a high quality, efficient and effective system. Automation of information systems is the transforming technology

  15. NHII Healthcare Provider Personal Health Population Health (Preparedness) Health Infospace

  16. NHII Healthcare Provider Personal Health Population Health (Preparedness) Health Infospace

  17. Comparability Interoperability Data Quality Framework for PMRI Standards

  18. Radiology Laboratories Patient HL7 & Registration/ Payers DICOM HL7 & ASTM Admissions Hospital NCPDP & HL7 Pharmacy ASC ASC X12N Billing HL7 X12N & Pharmacy Knowledge NCPDP HL7 HL7 Benefits Mgrs Clinical bases & PMRI PMRI content ASTM NCPDP & ASTM Physiological X12N & HL7 HL7 monitors IEEE Community Pharmacies Orders Medical IEEE Bedside & devices computer results Interoperability Status

  19. Terminology Vocabulary Set of highly granular, specialized terms Classification Organization of related terms Code representation of term Comparability Issues • Comparability requires that the meaning of data is consistent when shared among different parties

  20. Financial & Administrative Comparability Privacy & Security Interoperability Data Quality The Health Informatics Pipeline Foundation HIPAA Standards

  21. NHII Healthcare Provider Personal Health Population Health (Preparedness) Health Infospace

  22. Example Data Flow C. Broome - CDC

  23. The Need for Solutions is Urgent

  24. Third Wave of Public Health Information System Development • Federal Centric • State developed prototype • Installed in many states • State Centric • System Development by Consortium of States • Web enabled Immunization Registry • Reuse Model • ASP Model

  25. NHII Healthcare Provider Personal Health Population Health (Preparedness) Health Infospace

  26. Personal Health Dimension • Supports the management of individual wellness and health care decision-making • Includes a personal health record, created and controlled by the individual or family • Includes non-clinical information such as self-care trackers, health materials, local public health and health care services

  27. General attitudes toward PHR When asked about specific aspects of a PHR, consumers react favorably: • 83% of healthcare consumers want lab tests available online (Harris) • 69% want online charts for managing chronic conditions (Harris) • 80% want to receive personalized medical information online from their doctor after an office visit (Harris)

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