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By Bernie Monegain | 11:51 am | January 18, 2016
Venture capital funding for health information technology totaled $4.6 billion in 574 deals in 2015, according to Mercom Capital Group, a global communications and consulting firm that keeps tabs on VC investments.
By Bernie Monegain | 11:23 am | January 18, 2016
Thirty-one top health systems, hospitals and clinics are urging the Department of Health and Human Services to think again about pressing forward on Stage 3 meaningful use. Among them are Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center and Partners HealthCare in Boston; Geisinger Health Systems in Pennsylvania; Henry Ford Health System in Michigan and Intermountain Healthcare in Salt Lake City. In a January 14 letter to HHS Secretary Sylvia Burwell, the organizations say they are concerned that Stage 3 might even thwart much needed improvements to electronic health record systems. [Also: Meaningful use will likely end in 2016] “We recognize that the MU program has successfully driven the adoption of EHRs, with over 80 percent of hospitals and physicians now using these systems,” they write, adding that now is the time to make sure all practices “have high-functioning technology to achieve interoperability across all care settings.” Their pleas come on the heels of CMS chief Andy Slavitt’s claim that meaningful use would come to an end in 2016, a statement he made January 12 at the J.P. Morgan Healthcare Conference in San Francisco. He gave few details beyond that, except to say the program would be replaced by something better. John Halamka, MD, CIO of Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center in Boston, posted the letter on his blog. Halamka had already called for a halt to the program back in November. [Also: Did meaningful use spawn or stall EHR innovation?] “In particular, the MU program has diverted clinician, staff, and other resources away from activities with greater patient benefit and has forced technology to develop in a way that limits innovation,” the healthcare organizations said in their letter to Burwell. Also, the group points to the meaningful use program as the driving factor behind the poor design of EHR technology. “We believe Stage 2 EHR design requirements have been a fundamental drag on interoperability and that Stage 3 will worsen these problems,” they said. “The Stage 3 final rule, like its predecessor rules, is too focused on pass-fail requirements and lacks emphasis on outcomes. By maintaining this flawed structure, we do not believe Stage 3 will support movement towards more innovative care models or encourage continued participation.” [Like Healthcare IT News on Facebook] Robert M. Wachter, MD, a professor and the interim chairman of the department of medicine at the University of California, in a Jan. 16 opinion piece in the New York Times pointed to several measures that he said have failed doctors and teachers. “Of course, we need to hold professionals accountable,” he wrote. “But the focus on numbers has gone too far. We’re hitting the targets, but missing the point.” Twitter: @HealthITNews
By Jack McCarthy | 11:07 am | January 18, 2016
NorthShore University Health System is easing and, in certain instances, automating clinical workflows within electronic records to pinpoint high-risk patients and gaps in care using predictive modeling.
By Mike Miliard | 10:16 am | January 18, 2016
The U.S. Food and Drug Administration and the MITRE Corporation are working together to foster a more a collaborative approach to address the sometimes abject vulnerability of critical medical devices to cyberattack.
By Jessica Davis | 12:24 pm | January 15, 2016
Just over half of Americans feel it would be acceptable for doctors to use health information websites to manage patient records, according to a new Pew Research Center survey.
By Mike Miliard | 12:08 pm | January 15, 2016
Marin General Hospital has entered a 15-year, $90 million agreement with Philips to roll out an array of technologies including clinical informatics, patient monitoring, telehealth and imaging.
By Tom Sullivan | 11:53 am | January 15, 2016
For more than a dozen years, Healthcare IT News has chronicled the rapid evolution of healthcare and information technology. With the healthcare industry on the cusp of a transformative new era it is the perfect time for us to bring you a freshly rethought and redesigned website.
By Diana Manos | 11:39 am | January 15, 2016
Concepts like artificial intelligence and machine learning may seem pretty abstract in healthcare, but experts say the Internet of Things is poised to quickly change that.
By Diana Manos | 11:28 am | January 15, 2016
The Arkansas Antenatal and Neonatal Guidelines, Education and Learning System, otherwise known as ANGELS, has seen big gains in improving the state’s access to care and reducing infant mortality rates.
By Bernie Monegain | 11:01 am | January 15, 2016
Pharmacy giant CVS Health announced Thursday it has forged clinical partnerships with another four healthcare systems across the country: John Muir Health in California; University of Chicago Medical Center in Illinois; Novant Health, serving the Winston-Salem area in North Carolina; and University of Michigan Health System.