Blumenthal: HITECH is specific about health information exchange

By Mary Mosquera
Thursday, November 12, 2009

The stimulus law compels the creation of ways to exchange health information within states and across a nationwide heath information technology infrastructure, according to the nation’s health IT coordinator.

A key premise of the HITECH Act is that information should follow the patient.

“Artificial obstacles – technical, business related, bureaucratic – should not get in the way,” said David Blumenthal in a public e-mail message.

Blumenthal’s office is preparing to award $564 million in grants to states to establish information exchange.

“We will start announcing the awards this winter,” Blumenthal said. “These grantees’ activities must support interoperability that lets patient data follow the patient across political and geographic boundaries.”  

As a doctor, he said he wanted access many times to data that he knew were buried in the computers or paper records of another health system. 

“That is what we must get beyond, and it will inform all our policy choices now and going forward,” he said.

Consumers also must be assured that the most advanced technology and proven business practices will be used to secure the privacy and security of their personal health information. That means strengthening existing protections, filling in gaps as they emerge, and supporting new opportunities for patients’ access to and control of their information, Blumenthal said.

The HITECH Act emphasizes interoperability.

“Policies, programs, and incentives must aim for electronic health record (EHR) software and systems that can share information with different EHRs and networks so that information can follow patients wherever they go,” he said. 

The law also directed the Health and Human Services Department to invest in the infrastructure to support the nationwide electronic exchange and get health information moving. 

The HITECH Act provides for incentives for physicians and hospitals that are meaningful users of health IT. Although the official definition of “meaningful use” is not yet published, the stimulus specifically requires information exchange as a qualifier for the incentives, Blumenthal said.  

 



Please use the space provided below to write your comments to our editorial staff. We will respond to your comments and input via e-mail.

Your Name: (optional)


Your Email: (optional)


Your Location: (optional)


Comment:
 
 
  

Cover Story

magazine coverCover Story
Gauging meaningful use
The systems used to verify 'meaningful use' will help determine whether $34 billion in federal health IT incentives is money well spent.
Read more

eSeminar

'Meaningful Use' of the Nationwide Health Information Network: Lessons Learned from SSA and the States
February 11, 2010 11:00 Eastern / 10:00 Central / 09:00 Mountain / 08:00 Pacific
Nationwide Health Information Network pioneers will draw from their experiences establishing the first interstate application of the NHIN in a live health information exchange to offer their views on how the NHIN will support the meaningful use of health IT by government agencies, health information exchanges and individual care givers by 2011 and beyond.


Register Now >>

 

HIMSS10 Military Health Services

HIMSS is proud to provide timely and relevant educational sessions aimed at the unique needs of the Military and its health delivery systems. These sessions will instruct the Military community on the latest in their field, and will provide non-Military attendees with a perspective on the capabilities, processes and initiatives used by the military that may be applied to the commercial sector. more >>