Overview of Health Information Exchange (HIE) Prepared by the HIMSS Health Information Exchange Steering Committee August 2009

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Transcription:

Overview of Health Information Exchange (HIE) Prepared by the HIMSS Health Information Exchange Steering Committee August 2009 1 2009 Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS).

Agenda What Is HIE? Other Terms You May Hear The HIE Environment Why Build HIEs? Making the Decision to Participate in HIE HIE Leading Practices What the ARRA Means for HIE Summary Resources 2

What Is HIE? The National Alliance for Health Information Technology Report to the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology on Defining Key Health Information Technology Terms, April 28, 2008 http://www.hhs.gov/healthit/documents/m20080603/10_2_hit_terms.pdf Health Information Exchange (HIE) is a term used to describe both the sharing of health information electronically among two or more entities and also an organization which provides services that enable the sharing electronically of health information. 3

Other Terms You May Hear HIO Health Information Organization RHIO Regional Health Information Organization HIN Health Information Network RHIN Regional Health Information Network NHIN Nationwide Health Information Network 4

The HIE Environment Many find the HIE environment challenging and confusing. Prominent and inevitable issues involved in establishing and advancing HIE locally and nationally include: Privacy expectations & regulations Economic sustainability Government funding from the federal stimulus Adoption and implementation of IT standards Building community trust Intra- and inter-hie governance State government s role EMR to HIE interconnection HIEs PHR Vendors HITSP CCHIT ihe ONC RHIOS AHIC Use Cases HHS E H R State Efforts NHIN Federal Stimulus Interoperability Security & HIPAA Privacy Standards There is a high level of ongoing discussion and activity aimed at advancing each of these issues 5

The Individual HIE Entity Administrative Organizational Entity Governance Domain Coordination Funding/Membership Policy Creation Practices Education Standards Adoption Certification Administrative HIE Business Model Foundational Business & Clinical Services Business & Clinical Services Adoption Transformation Clinical Process Quality Exchange Services Foundational Data Exchange Functions/Utility Interoperability Privacy / Consent Security Connectivity 6

The National HIE View Certification Healthcare Commission for Information Healthcare Technology Information Standards Panel Technology (HITSP) (CCHIT) American Health Information Community Exchange Health Information Nationwide Health Security and Privacy Information Network Collaboration Architecture (HISPC) Projects(NHIN) Standards Organizations Components: Policies Practices Architecture Standards Certification Privacy / Security Regional/State HIE-Led Efforts FUTURE NHIN Nationwide Information Network (NHIN) Regional Regional Provider/Private/Public Provider/Private/Public Led Efforts Led Efforts Regional/State HIE-Led Efforts Regional/State HIE-Led Efforts 7

NHIN FUTURE Connections The NHIN will be made up of many interconnected state, regional and local HIEs. 8

Why Build HIEs? The ability to exchange health information electronically is a basic and critical capability that is the foundation of efforts to improve healthcare in the US. The increased availability of relevant health information through HIE: Provides a key building block for improved patient care, quality and safety Makes relevant healthcare information available where and when it is needed Provides the connecting point for an organized, standardized process for data exchange across local, regional and state-wide HIT initiatives Provides the means to reduce duplication of services with a resultant reduction of healthcare costs Facilitates reduced operational costs by enabling automation of many (currently manual) administrative tasks Provides governance and management over the data exchange process 9

Types of Organizations That Drive HIE Providers Dominant provider(s) in a given geographic or medical trading area determines the need for HIE Employers Large employer(s) with targeted business objectives (e.g., reducing costs, PHR offering to employees) coalesce around area providers Payers Dominant payer(s) may drive the process by sponsoring initial meetings, facilitating initial development activities, providing initial seed money or offering claims based data or software Private/Public Communities or Coalitions Local/regional stakeholders coalesce around unique business and/or geographic interests State-Sponsored/State-Directed Collaboration State acting as convener, may organize state-wide HIE and/or encourage local/regional HIEs and may provide funding for these regional initiatives through grants for planning and implementation American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009: This legislation, also known as the stimulus bill, provides funding for health information technology including health information exchange. This funding and the policies that accompany it are already driving additional HIE activity across the country. 10

Benefits of an HIE Convergence of Healthcare Delivery and Technology to Speed the Evolution of the Healthcare System An HIE: Provides a vehicle to support improved patient care quality and safety Provides a mechanism to reduce duplication of services and reduce healthcare costs Facilitates operational and administrative efficiencies resulting in reduced operational costs Enables the integration of sick (illness)-care with well-care Links first-responder teams with trauma care teams Stimulates consumer education and involvement in their healthcare process Promotes transparency of service and cost 11

Benefits of an HIE (continued) An HIE also: Creates a potential for feedback loop between research and actual practice Enables public health to meet its commitment to the community Facilitates the efficient deployment of emerging technology and healthcare services, such as e-prescribing Provides the backbone technical infrastructure for leverage by the NHIN and state level HIT initiatives Provides a basic level of interoperability between physicianmaintained EHRs and patient-maintained PHRs 12

Key Stakeholders 13

Making the Decision to Participate in HIE Prior to committing to participation in an HIE, there are several factors that should be evaluated and understood. These include: The goals and philosophy of the HIE The services the HIE offers Participant technology requirements The economics and sustainability of the HIE (financial costs and benefits) The anticipated non-economic benefits such as improvements in quality or safety How applicable state and federal regulations, such as HIPAA, are addressed Any risks such as liability, project failure or security breach The leadership, governance and contracts such as data use agreements The HIE s current level of developmental maturity vis-à-vis other HIEs The legal structure of the HIE 14

HIE Leading Practices Engage key stakeholders early Keep them engaged through regular communication Engage opinion leaders to build stakeholder support Develop trust and support Set realistic expectations Build a realistic plan for creating and implementing services and communicate it often Start early to develop a financial plan Work with key stakeholders to create a business model based on revenue. Too much grant funding can be a moral hazard and a temptation to postpone defining a sustainable financial model ROI is achieved over time Engage opinion leaders to build stakeholder support Listen to your community Your community will drive the services that the HIE should provide There are some excellent examples of successful HIEs. However, HIEs are and will continue to be an emerging market. 15

HIE Success & Sustainability Return on Investment Return on investment (ROI) comes only if the HIE can generate revenue based on providing valued services. To have a sustainable HIE, you need to identify and provide services that your community values and will pay for. Build your HIE to meet the needs of your targeted community. Local and regional healthcare consumers and the community will ultimately provide the definition of a successful HIE. 16

American Reinvestment and Recovery Act (ARRA) 17 2009 Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS).

What the ARRA Means for HIE What We Know There is specific funding for HIE development There is additional funding to accelerate physician and hospital adoption of EHRs and EMRs HIE allocated funding most likely will be spent first EMR funding will be allocated through incentives beginning in 2011 What We Don t Yet Know What is the definition of meaningful use The application process for funding The allocation process for distribution of the funds How these efforts will improve the quality of care 18

Summary HIT will improve the delivery of healthcare. HIEs are strategic in redefining the delivery process by enabling data exchange across all stakeholders. HIEs will ultimately provide a single health record view for each patient. Efficiency through HIT will help the care provider reduce costs, increase quality and provide a more satisfying patient care experience. Re-inventing the delivery of healthcare requires an upfront investment and long-term commitment. HIEs are part of the solution. Funding HIT is an investment in the future success of healthcare in the United States. 19

Resources HIMSS HIE Resources: http://www.himss.org/asp/topics_focusdynamic.asp?faid=1411 HIMSS HIE Common Practices Survey White Paper: http://www.himss.org/content/files/rhio/hie_commonpracticeswhitepap er20090330.pdf State Level HIE Consensus Project: http://www.slhie.org/ National Governor s Association-Center for Best Practices: http://www.nga.org/portal/site/nga/menuitem.50aeae5ff70b817ae8ebb856a 11010a0/ National Conference of State Legislatures: www.ncsl.org 20

Resources United States Official ARRA Website: www.recovery.gov ARRA Information: http://www.himss.org/economicstimulus/ ARRA Summary and Analysis ARRA Frequently Asked Questions Timelines 21 2009 Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS).

Appendix Examples of Established HIEs 22

Examples of Established HIEs HealthBridge Market(s): Greater Cincinnati area including Batesville, IN, Northern Kentucky; Services to 2 other HIEs Primary Services: Electronic delivery of lab, radiology, transcription, hospital reports, and secure clinical messaging Electronic lab ordering Quality services Scale: 28 hospitals, 700 physician practices; 5,000 physicians, 2.7 million secure clinical results per month, 2.5 million patients http://www.healthbridge.org/ CareSpark Market(s): 17 central Appalachian counties of northeast TN (8 counties) and southwest Va (9 counties) Primary Services: Health Information Exchange Medication, diagnostic, clinical information Clinical Decision Support Link TN and VA Immunization Registries Scale: serving 750,000 residents and 1400 physicians, 250,000 patients in the system, and 200 clinician users. www.carespark.com Indiana Health Information Exchange Market(s): Central, west, southwest, and northwest Indiana (population ~3.0 million) Primary Services: Electronic delivery of lab, radiology, transcription results Community health record repository Clinical quality services Scale: 55 data sources, 3600 physician practices, 10,600 physicians, 3 million secure clinical results per month. http://www.ihie.org/ MedVirginia Market(s): Central Virginia, including Richmond Metropolitan Area Primary Services: Electronic delivery of lab results, radiology results, hospital reports, Secure clinical messaging Community health record repository Integrated e-prescribing and practice management SSA disability determination data support Scale: 1,200 users,600,000 unique patient charts, 6 hospitals and 2 reference labs 23 http://www.medvirginia.net/

Acknowledgments The initial presentation was developed by the 2006-2007 HIMSS HIE Steering Committee. This presentation was updated in 2009 by the following members of the HIE Steering Committee with oversight of the 2008-2009 HIMSS HIE Steering Committee: Laura Kolkman, RN, MS, Chair of the 2008-2009 HIE Steering Committee, President, Mosaica Partners, LLC John Kansky, MSE, MBA, FHIMSS, CPHIMS, VP, Business Development, Indiana Health Information Exchange Terri Ripley, MIT, CPHIMS, Director, Systems & Programming, Centra 24