The federal government incentivized the adoption of the EHR by giving a bonus to practices which purchased EHRs. while at the same time imposing a perverse penalty for those who did not do so. A comopressed time frame forced practices to purchase inadequate, poorly designed software. The feds also imposed requirement which they called meaningful use (MU). Meaningful use (MU), in a health information technology (HIT) context, defines minimum U.S. government standards for using electronic health records (EHR) and for exchanging patient clinical data between healthcare providers, between healthcare providers and insurers, and between healthcare providers and patients.
Author
Anne Zieger
Anne Zieger is a healthcare journalist who has written about the industry for 30 years. Her work has appeared in all of the leading healthcare industry publications, and she's served as editor in chief of several healthcare B2B sites.
Meaningful Use stages
- Stage 1. Promotes basic EHR adoption and data gathering.
- Stage 2. Emphasizes care coordination and exchange of patient information.
- Stage 3. Improves healthcare outcomes.
Select the links below to learn more about the measures for Stage 1/Modified Stage 2 , Stage 2 , and Electronic Clinical Quality Measures (eCQMs).
Though most medical groups have invested heavily in health IT, particularly EHRs, most are still struggling to manage the data necessary for running the practice. Sure, Meaningful Use incentives helped them get the technology in the door, squeezing the best performance out of it calls for institutional and financial resources that many can’t afford.
As a result. new survey results underscoring the difficulty practices face in managing data came as little surprise to me. The survey, which was sponsored by Geneia found that 89% of responding physicians felt that the “business and regulation of healthcare” has had a negative effect on the practice of medicine. Fifty-two percent of those responding were ambivalent about the impact of EHRs in their workplace. This included 21% who had a positive view and 22% a negative view of the role of EHRs. In addition, while 96% of respondents said that they believe that EHRs should integrate better with technology systems used by the office and insurance providers, 57% said that their EHRs don’t integrate these systems. Meanwhile, more than two-thirds of respondents said they didn’t have the staff and resources needed to analyze and use EHR data efficiently.
As a result. new survey results underscoring the difficulty practices face in managing data came as little surprise to me. The survey, which was sponsored by Geneia found that 89% of responding physicians felt that the “business and regulation of healthcare” has had a negative effect on the practice of medicine. Fifty-two percent of those responding were ambivalent about the impact of EHRs in their workplace. This included 21% who had a positive view and 22% a negative view of the role of EHRs. In addition, while 96% of respondents said that they believe that EHRs should integrate better with technology systems used by the office and insurance providers, 57% said that their EHRs don’t integrate these systems. Meanwhile, more than two-thirds of respondents said they didn’t have the staff and resources needed to analyze and use EHR data efficiently.
Seventy-nine percent of respondents said they’d like to use an integrated EHR analytics tool to access predictive and reporting on existing data. Also, many said they’d like to have population health tools available to identify high-risk patients, find patients who need proactive screenings or monitoring and stratify patients into low-, rising- and high-risk categories.
Also, 68% said they need advanced analytics tools to be successful under value-based care arrangements, with 64% of population health users reporting that they think they such tools can help them assess patient history and needs more efficiently.
As things stand, however, these physicians don’t seem to be getting enough IT bang for their buck. Virtually all (96%) reported that the amount of time they spend on data input and reporting has grown over the last 10 years, and they’re having trouble keeping up with the pace. Also, 86% agreed that “the heightened demand for data reporting to support quality metrics and the business side of healthcare has diminished my joy in practicing medicine.”
It is extremely interesting how medical device software evolve before our own eyes. The technology, like IoT, are changing the life as we know it. I wonder what other secretss does the technology hide from us still.
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