January 25, 2010
Another Meaningful Use Webcast
Written by: JohnThese webcasts have been popping up all over the place. It’s really quite amazing. You could make it a full time career just attending various webcasts on the EMR stimulus and meaningful use. Well, I’ve seen a ton of them, but this one by Modern Healthcare looked pretty interesting with a variety of people including the Director of CMS Office of E-Health Standards and Services. You can read more about it here and I’ll put some of the details of the meaningful use regulations webcast below:
Wednesday, Jan. 27, 2010
10 a.m. Central Time
FREE REGISTRATION*
About this Webcast
The federal government is offering as much as $34 billion in financial assistance to healthcare providers that buy, implement and use information technology in a manner consistent with the way the government wants it to be used. The government explained what it wants in nearly 700 pages of proposed regulations issued earlier this month.
In this webcast moderated by Modern Healthcare Information Technology Reporter Joseph Conn, four healthcare IT experts will break down those regulations and help attendees:
Identify the key sections of the regulations
Understand the impact of the regulations on hospitals, health systems and physician practices
Teach providers strategies to qualify for federal funding
Featured Speakers
J. Michael Kramer, M.D.
Chief Medical Information Officer
Trinity Health
Novi, Mich.
David Seaman
CEO
Pronger Smith Medical Care
Blue Island, Ill.
Tony Trenkle
Director
CMS Office of E-Health Standards and Services
Washington
Paul Tang, M.D.
Chief Medical Information Officer
Palo Alto Medical Foundation
Palo Alto, CA
P.S. If you’re able to attend this or any other webcast and want to do a guest post on what was said at the webcast, feel free to contact me on the EMR and EHR contact us page.
Tags: ARRA • David Seaman • EHR Stimulus • EMR Stimulus • HITECH • J. Michael Kramer • Meaningful Use • Modern Healthcare • Paul Tang • Tony TrenkleOctober 27, 2009
HIT Policy Committee Confronts Meaningful Use and Specialists
Written by: JohnGoverment Health IT summarized some of the discussion that happened today at the HIT policy committee meeting which focused on the challenge of applying meaningful use across all of the various specialty groups in healthcare. Here’s some excerpts from the article:
The Health IT Policy Committee today confronted the problem of how to craft a manageable set of requirements for the “meaningful use” of health IT across an industry where specialties and new practice variations are common – and where one policy may not fit all.
…
Those measures were geared for what is normally a patient’s first encounter with the health system: the primary care physician. But many specialists – who do not treat a wide range of diseases and conditions – may not be able to comply with all the current 2011 [meaningful use] requirements.
“Not all objectives and measures are appropriate for all eligible professionals,” said Paul Tang, vice chairman of the Committee and chief medical information officer at Palo Alto Foundation.
As a result, the committee must decide which of the 25 meaningful use measures should apply to specialists so they still can qualify for 2011 incentive payments – and which requirements to delay introducing til 2013 and 2015.
“I don’t think it was understood that we weren’t intending to have all the measures apply to all specialists,” said Dr. David Blumenthal, the national health IT coordinator.
Unfortunately, I think this discussion has just begun and is going to get more complicated as we go. I know of a number of cases where the MU requirements just don’t make sense to a specialist. However, the challenge will be to have a set of requirements that aren’t so complex that it takes a specialist to be able to understand how the meaningful use requirements apply across the spectrum of doctors in healthcare.
What are your thoughts on how they should apply meaningful use effectively?
Tags: ARRA • David Blumenthal • EHR Stimulus • EMR Stimulus • HIT Policy Committee • Meaningful Use • Paul Tang • Specialists









