The digital health space refers to the integration of technology and health care services to improve the overall quality of health care delivery. It encompasses a wide range of innovative and emerging technologies such as wearables, telehealth, artificial intelligence, mobile health, and electronic health records (EHRs). The digital health space offers numerous benefits such as improved patient outcomes, increased access to health care, reduced costs, and improved communication and collaboration between patients and health care providers. For example, patients can now monitor their vital signs such as blood pressure and glucose levels from home using wearable devices and share the data with their doctors in real-time. Telehealth technology allows patients to consult with their health care providers remotely without having to travel to the hospital, making health care more accessible, particularly in remote or rural areas. Artificial intelligence can be used to analyze vast amounts of patient data to identify patterns, predict outcomes, and provide personalized treatment recommendations. Overall, the digital health space is rapidly evolving, and the integration of technology in health

Sunday, October 25, 2015

The State of Controlled Substance E-Prescribing


Now that electronic prescribing of controlled substances (EPCS) is permitted in all US states, pharmacists can expect e-prescriptions to gain momentum.

Ken Whittemore Jr, RPh, MBA, senior vice president of professional and regulatory affairs at Surescripts, provided an update on EPCS at the National Community Pharmacists Association (NCPA) Annual Convention, which is taking place in Washington, DC, from October 10-14, 2015.

In his presentation, Whittemore reviewed some of the challenges that paper prescriptions for controlled substances pose, such as fraudulent prescription pad forgery. EPCS, on the other hand, can reduce fraud and abuse, secure electronic records, and improve safety and patient care, Whittemore noted.

EPCS Product Directory  Drummond certified



He also highlighted research from the US Department of Justice that found e-prescribing could result in an annualized cost savings potential of $700 million. Plus, EPCS can reduce the number of callbacks between pharmacies and prescribers and can remove the need to store paper prescriptions.

Whittemore noted that it has been 5 years since the Drug Enforcement Administration (DEA) published its interim final rule (IFR) that allowed for EPCS, but there have been challenges slowing down its adoption.

Despite the long length of time since the DEA issued its IFR and the efforts to spread awareness about EPCS, there is still some misunderstanding among pharmacists and physicians.

“We still find that many doctors and pharmacists are not aware of the fact that EPCS is legal, probably moreso on the physician side than the pharmacy side,” Whittemore noted.

He also spoke about networks, such as Surescripts, that enable pharmacy and prescriber applications of EPCS, provide standards for implementation, and connect pharmacy and prescriber software through a “trusted national health information network.”

Whittemore outlined several EPCS readiness steps for pharmacies:

·         Upgrade the software system so that it can receive and archive electronic prescriptions.
·         Achieve network certification, which involves the network and the pharmacy vendor working together.
·         Undergo a third-party audit to ensure compliance so that pharmacy software applications meet DEA requirements for recording, receiving, and storing e-prescriptions for controlled substances.

The steps for physicians are similar, but they also have to go through an identity proofing process involving 2-factor authentication (TFA) credentials. These TFA credentials call for 2 of the following: something you are, something you know, and/or something you have. Whittemore likened this to how individuals use an ATM machine. The card is something the individual owns, and the PIN is what the individual knows.

For physicians, TFA credentials may take form in tokens or in biometrics, such as fingerprint scans. In other words, a physician might need a code and a fingerprint scan to write an EPCS.


 
EPCS momentum is growing, and Whittemore applauded pharmacists for their steady adoption.

“The pharmacies have done a good job stepping forward,” Whittemore said.

Nationally, EPCS monthly volume was around 1.8 million in September 2015—up from around 1.1 million in July 2015.

“It’s starting to take off,” Whittemore said.  

Meanwhile, nationwide pharmacy EPCS adoption was around 64% in August 2015, meaning 64% of pharmacies had seen at least 1 EPCS in that month.

Whittemore noted that back when e-prescribing for non-controlled substances was gaining ground, it wasn’t until around 80% of pharmacies were accepting e-prescriptions that physicians started to show more interest in sending e-prescriptions for non-controlled substances.

“Once you get to that 80%, that seems to be the tipping point,” he said, suggesting physicians could react the same for EPCS.

The State of Controlled Substance E-Prescribing

How EHR Portals Can Increase and Optimize Patient Engagement

What is an EHR Patient Portal ?

Custom, EMR-Integrated Patient Portals


Connecting Patients and Healthcare Providers

Custom patient portals often provide the followng
1. Secure Messaging
2. Appointment scheduling and notifications
3..Access to billing information
4, Insurance
5. Medical Records
6. Ability to print a medical record summary
7. Order prescription refills

Example:   For general information only. Dligital Health Space neither endorses or recommends any products shown here for examples.  


Thursday, October 22, 2015

Senate Committee Developing Legislation To Fix EHR Issues - iHealthBeat

Transitional Chaos or Enduring Harm? The EHR and the Disruption of Medicine



Most clinicians have few good things to say about the current status of electronic medical records.  The goals are high, but obtainable.


The U.S. Senate is now investigating solutions which are actionable.  It is a late response, however any and all assistance is gratefully received.  Perhaps an earlier response would have missed many important issues in regard to EHRs.

The Senate Health, Education, Labor and Pensions Committee is developing legislation to address electronic health record-related issues identified by stakeholders during a series of six hearings this year,National Journal reports (Roubein, National Journal, 10/21).

With this in mind, readers should contact their appropriate representatives and committee members regarding your own observations.

During one of the hearings in April, Sen. Lamar Alexander (R-Tenn.) said that he and Sen. Patty Murray (D-Wash.), the ranking Democrat on the HELP committee, established a bipartisan working group to identify problems with EHRs that can be addressed through administrative or legislative action (iHealthBeat, 4/24).  

Legislation Priorities

Alexander has said the committee has been working with the Obama administration "diligently for months to develop seven areas of agreement for legislation to actually achieve interoperability."
According to National Journal, those priorities include:
  • Bolstering standards;
  • Ensuring that the EHR certification system does what is intended to;
  • Improving access to EHRs for all members of a health care team;
  • Improving patient access to their medical records;
  • Limiting "physician documentation";
  • Preventing information blocking; and
  • Strengthening the security and privacy of EHRs.
Other Potential Priorities
Meanwhile, Murray has said that other priorities should include developing a system for providers to shop for and compare EHR systems.
Earlier this month, Sens. Bill Cassidy (R-La.) and Sheldon Whitehouse (D-R.I.)introduced legislation to address such an issue (National Journal, 10/21). Specifically, the Transparent Ratings on Usability and Security to Transform Information Technology -- or TRUST IT -- Act of 2015, would require the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT to develop a rating system for health IT products to measure their performance on:
  • Interoperability;
  • Security; and
  • Usability (iHealthBeat, 10/8). Emphasis by author
Unfortunately Usability is last on the list of 'potential priorities.  Most clinicians, in my experience, would place this as a first, not a potential priorities.  That is an understatement.



http://www.ihealthbeat.org/articles/2015/10/22/senate-committee-developing-legislation-to-fix-ehr-issue

 Senate Committee Developing Legislation To Fix EHR Issues - iHealthBeat

Tuesday, October 20, 2015

Let Doctors Be Doctors – If Jay Z Sang EHR | EMR and HIPAA

Let Doctors Be Doctors – If Jay Z Sang EHR | EMR and HIPAA

The MD Emmy goes this year to ZdoggMD (Zubin Demania, a self styled proponent of bringing medical issues to the attention of music lovers of all bent of all genre's. His usual stage is the hospital halls, medical school  graduations and anyone willing to listen to his ''stuff".  I have watched Zubin over the years beginning with his exit from academic medicine as a hospitalist.

Coincidentally, in Las Vegas the older portion of the  "strip" was about to undergo a major transformation in order to bring 'normal residents" to the downtown area. Of course health care was needed for this new 'patient centered model home.

Thus was born 'Turntable Health'.

The Location, Directions and a few images.
                      



There are no slot machines


Let Doctors Be Doctors


Turntable Health is the arm of the investment group, sparked In 2012 by CEO of Zappos, Tony Hsieh, who launched a revitalization project investing 350 million dollars of his own money to help rejuvenate downtown Las Vegas through entrepreneurship and technology that helped catalyze the growth and popularity of the startup scene.

50 Las Vegas Startups You Should Get To Know – From Early Stage To Thriving
When is the last time you heard the words healthcare and fun in the same sentence? Oh yes, probably never! TurnTable is a healthcare startup that making primary care and prevention fun, cool, and effective with a mission to expand to speciality and hospital care around the world.
They are an innovative, membership-model primary care clinic focused on prevention unlike typical primary care delivery models. They have three notable innovations:
First, they changed the payment model from fee-for-service episodic “sick care” to a flat membership fee for all-you-can-treat access to their care team. This encourages people to be seen when they are well, so they can stay that way

Second, they have a unique team-based model that incorporates doctors, nurses, social workers, and health coaches to treat a patient in an integrated and holistic fashion.
Third, with their partner, Iora Health, they have implemented a custom electronic health record system that identifies patients at risk for disease and allows their team to proactively reach out to them to keep them out of trouble.

This model saves money in terms of ER and speciality costs, improves outcomes such as hypertension control and smoking cessation, and results in vastly happier patients.

Along with Dr Z who rants about the inadequacy and bloat of meaningful use in EHRs the reader can review:

Related Posts

  1. The EHR Serenade by Enoch Choi at Doctors 2.0 and Health 2.0
  2. Unbiased, Targeted and Useful Resources for Doctors Evaluating EMR Systems
  3. Doctors Expected To Get “Meaningful Choices” From Patients On HIE Data Use
  4. Meaningful Use – Doctors Have No Choice
  5. Meaningful Use Will Force Doctors into ACOs