Archive for the ‘EMR EHR Systems’ Category

EHR Incentive Program Registration

Friday, December 24th, 2010

EHR Incentive ProgramThe Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has announced the opening of registration for the EHR Incentive Program. Eligible Professionals and Eligible Hospitals may register on and after January 3, 2011. You can learn more about the EHR Incentive Program, eligibility requirements, registration requirements, and attestation requirements here.

CMS is encouraging Eligible Professionals and Eligible Hospitals to register as soon as possible. It is possible to register before installation or implementation of an EHR system.

Selecting The Best EHR Software

Sunday, December 19th, 2010

EMR SelectSelecting EHR Software – Choosing the best Electronic Health Records (Electronic Medical Records) software for your organization can be a challenge. So many respected EHR vendors to choose among, and so many marginal EHR vendors to avoid. And a multitude of EHR feature and function points to consider, many of which are critical to your needs, and many of which are unimportant and may actually get in your way.

Objective EHR Decision Support – The firm worked with Olive Consulting Group over several months to create and refine a powerful EHR decision support tool called EMR Select. By combining Olive’s experience with HIT and EHR with the firm’s information technology procurement expertise, we have created an EHR selection and decision support tool that has no peer. Neither Olive nor the firm accepts any commission, referral fee or other remuneration from any EHR vendor. EMR Select is 100% objective and unbiased. Learn more about EMR Select here.

EHR Vendors Covered – At present, EMR Select covers offerings from sixty-two (62) of the best ambulatory EHR vendors, and we are adding coverage of additional EHR software vendors.

Evaluation Criteria – EMR Select includes 300+ discrete EHR software evaluation criteria for physicians and physician groups, and 1200+ EHR software evaluation criteria for hospitals. The analytic and scoring tools within EMR Select allow you to compare EHR software offerings efficiently and reliably.

EMR “Meaningful Use” Defined By ONCHIT

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Doctor EMR PC

Long-Awaited Criteria – ONCHIT has finally issued regulations that define “meaningful use” of EMRs, the major qualifying criterion for the EMR adoption incentives provided by ARRA.

You can view the text of the regulations here.

Stage 1 criteria take effect in 2011. Stage 2 criteria will apply in 2013, and Stage 3 criteria in 2015 (both to be defined at a later date).

Major Elements of the Meaningful Use Rules:

CPOE

Practices: Use CPOE for orders involving medications, laboratory, radiology, and referrals.
Hospitals: medications, laboratory, radiology, blood bank, PT, OT, RT, rehab, dialysis, consults, and discharge and transfer.

Orders do not have to be sent electronically to the fulfilling department (lab, pharmacy, etc.)
Practices must enter 80% of their total orders directly by the clinician into the CPOE system. Hospitals must have 10% of all orders entered by CPOE.

Clinical Checking of Orders

Real-time screening (drug-drug interactions and drug-allergy contraindications), formulary check, user ability to maintain screening rules, track user responses to alerts.

Problem List

Longitudinal current and active diagnoses coded in ICD-9-CM or SNOMED CT.
80% of unique patients must have at least one coded problem/diagnosis, with “none” being an allowed entry (hospitals and practices).

E-Prescribing

Practices only.
Must send 75% of non-controlled substance prescriptions electronically.

Active Medication List

80% of unique patients must have at least one coded entry, with “none” being an allowed entry (hospitals and practices).

Medication Allergy List

Longitudinal with allergy history.
80% of unique patients must have at least one coded entry, with “none” being an allowed entry (hospitals and practices).

Demographics

Practices: preferred language, insurance type, gender, race, ethnicity, and data of birth.
Hospitals: all of the above plus date and cause of death if applicable.
80% of patients must have demographics recorded as structured data

Vital Signs

Height, weight, BP, BMI, growth charts for patients 2-20 years old, temperature, pulse.
80% of patients aged 2 and over must have blood pressure and BMI entered.
Children 2-20 must have a growth chart.

Smoking Status

Record if current smoker, former smoker, or never smoked.
Must be recorded for 80% of patients.

Structured Lab Results

Display results, translate LOINC codes, allow maintenance based on new results.
Must record as structured EHR data 50% of all results that are delivered in positive/negative or numeric format.

Patient Lists

Allow user to select, sort, retrieve, and output patient lists based on demographics, medications, and conditions.

Report Quality Measures to CMS and States

Calculate, display, and submit quality measure results

Patient Reminders

Practices only: issue based on patient preferences, demographics, conditions, and medication list.

Five Clinical Decision Support Rules

Beyond drug screening, based on demographics: diagnoses, lab results, or medication list. Real-time alerts and suggestions based on evidence. Track response to alerts.

Eligibility

Allow user to record and display based on eligibility response from insurer.
Must cover 80% of unique patients.

Submit Claims

Must submit 80% of all claims filed electronically.

Electronic Copy of Health Information to Patients

Allow user to create an electronic copy of test results, problem list, medication list, medication allergy list, immunizations, and procedures. Hospitals must also provide a discharge summary but not procedures.
Must provide an electronic copy of health information to requesting patients within 48 hours.

Electronic Copy of Discharge Instructions

Hospitals only.
Must provide electronically to 80% of discharged patients who request them.

Timely Patient Access to Health Information

Practices only: diagnostic results, problem list, medication list, medication allergy list, immunizations, and procedures. Within 96 hours of availability.
Must provide to 10% of unique patients.

Clinical Summary of Each Office Visit

Practices only: diagnostic results, medication list, procedures, problem list, immunizations.
Must provide for 80% of office visits.

Information Exchange

Enable electronic sending and receiving of diagnostic test results, problem list, medication list, medication allergy list, immunizations, and procedures. Hospital requirements also include a discharge summary.
Must conduct at least one test of exchanging information.

Medication Reconciliation

Compare and merge two or more medication lists into a single list that can be displayed in real time.
Must be performed in 80% of encounters and care transitions.

Submit Data to Immunization Registries

Must conduct at least one test of submitting information.

Submit Lab Results to Public Health Agencies

Hospitals only.
Must conduct at least one test of submitting information.

Submit Syndrome Surveillance Data to Public Health Agencies

Must conduct at least one test of submitting information.

Protect Electronic Patient Information

Unique identifier, emergency access for authorized users, session timeout, encryption where preferred, encryption when exchanging information, maintain audit logs, provide integrity check for recipient of electronically transmitted information, verify user identities and access privileges, record PHI disclosures.
Must conduct a security risk analysis and implement security updates.

ARRA – EMR Funding and Incentives

Tuesday, January 5th, 2010

Tennessee and Pennsylvania – The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS) has announced that Medicaid programs in Tennessee and Pennsylvania will receive federal matching funds for state planning activities to implement the electronic health record incentive program established by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009.

Iowa was the first state to receive the matching funds; California, Georgia, Idaho, Montana, New York, Texas and the U.S. Virgin Islands were the next seven states and territories to receive the funds.

How Will the Dollars Be Used? – Federal matching funds will be uses by the states for planning activities that include a comprehensive analysis to determine the status of health IT activities in the states. Information will be gathered on issues such as existing barriers to the use of EHRs, provider eligibility for EHR incentive payments and the creation of state Medicaid health IT plans.

Best EMR Software

Wednesday, October 28th, 2009

Best EMR Software

The Best EMR Software – The best EMR software is the EMR software that’s best for you. All EMR systems have the same end game in mind, but how each system accomplishes its objectives varies from system to system and vendor to vendor.

The Best EMR Software for You – If you want to find the best EMR software for you, try EMRmatch. EMRmatch allows you to state your needs and preferences across a wide range of EMR software feature and function points, including useability criteria. Using a sophisticated statistical matching engine, EMRmatch checks your needs and preferences against standardized information about a large number of EMR software offerings presently on the market. This is good stuff, but there’s more. EMRmatch is 100% objective and unbiased, with no ties to the EMR vendors (no reseller relationships, no referral fees and no commissions).

Learn More About Finding the Best EMR Software – You can learn more about EMRmatch here.

Best EMR Systems – Best EHR Systems

Saturday, September 19th, 2009

TabletPC

Right Fit – The best EMR (EHR) system is the one that’s best for you. Although the various EMR systems on the market all do essentially the same thing, how they acheive their objective varies from one EMR system vendor to the next. Your goal is to find the system that most closely matches your specialty, existing patient base, workflows and routines. Your EMR/PM system must serve you, not the other way around.

Too Many Choices, Too Little Time – With the large number of EMR system vendors out there, and the even larger number of decision points facing any EMR system buyer, finding the right EMR system can be challenging. Pain is inevitable, but suffering is a choice! Get some help.

Why You Need a Tool – A market-specific screening tool is an efficient means of narrowing the EMR system vendor field because it gives structure to your buying process and systematically covers critical decision points. EMRmatch is a vendor screening tool designed specifically for the EMR/PM system market. It allows you to enter your particular needs and preferences across a wide range of EMR/PM system feature and function points. It then compares your needs and preferences to standardized elements of information about the various EMR/PM systems on the market, returning 4-6 vendors whose systems most closely match your stated needs and preferences. Learn can learn more about EMRmatch here.