What should you think about HIEs

Part of the problem I have with HIEs is similar to the old Wendy’s commercial, “Where’s the beef.” Only in this case the question becomes, “Where’s the value add?”

There are hundreds of them, HIEs that is. Each one developed autonomously. Some are built within a hospital which has more than one EHR. Others are being built to serve among a hospital group, and others are geographical. Which of the HIEs is being built by a team of people who have ever built one? To my knowledge, none.

Hundreds of HIEs being built independently from one another by people who’ve never before built an HIE. Hundreds being built to transport the electronic medical records of providers using a few hundred different EHRs, each EHR operating with different standards, none of which benefits from interacting with another.

What is the purpose of the HIE? It reminds me of this children’s’ icebreaker game where the children sit in a circle. The first child starts by whispering a phrase into the ear of the person sitting next to her. She can only say the phrase once. The child she whispers it to must then whisper it to the child next to her. This continues until it goes all the way around the circle. Usually, by the time the phrase gets back around to the original person, it is completely different.

Like shuffling an EMR from one place to the next through a series of intermediaries. What does it look like when it comes out the back end?

After all, what is the purpose of the HIE? It should act like a handoff, like a mini N-HIN. It does not modify the data, at least not intentionally. If there is a more complex way to get a person’s health record from point A to point B, I have not seen it. HIEs are healthcare’s Rube Goldberg mechanism.

I think that when all is said and done, HIEs will have faded away. Until then providers should keep their focus on developing an EHR which actually serves their business model.

At what point do we decide this will not work?

We haven't tried this approach yet

We haven't tried this approach yet

What is your natural reaction when you are faced with something that you know doesn’t make sense?  Most people respond with silence, or they join the majority, whatever the issue.  I’ve never been good at being most people–the shoes are too tight.

For your edification and consideration.

State CIOs Get ‘To-Do’ List

HDM Breaking News, August 25, 2009

The National Association of State Chief Information Officers has published a report giving guidance to CIOs as their states implement health information technology provisions of the HITECH Act within American Recovery and Reinvestment Act.

The act requires state leadership in two primary areas: oversight for the planning and deployment of health information exchanges and management of the Medicaid incentive payments for meaningful use of electronic health records, the report notes.

“The passage of the HITECH Act essentially merged health policy with technology policy across state government and state CIOs must play a key role in HIE development and implementation,” according to the report.

The report includes a list of upcoming deadlines for specific federal regulatory actions, including those most affecting states and their CIOs. The report also details four broad areas where CIOs can have a major impact on HIE initiatives: planning, governance, financing/sustainability and policy.

“The HITECH Act placed a significant amount of new responsibilities on states in regards to state oversight for HIE and the planning and implementation grants for preparing for HIE,” the report states. “During this initial planning period, state CIOs must secure a seat at the table to establish themselves as key stakeholders and also to recognize strengths and identify weaker points that require resolution within their own offices relating to statewide HIT/HIE planning. They must ask themselves what they, with their unique enterprise view, can do to support and contribute to each of these areas.”

That was simple.  I’m thinking that if we can tie the IRS into this system of HIE, HITECH, ARRA, Rhoi, CIO, MOUSE we may be on to something useful.  Did you ever think that acronyms are used as a means of obfuscation, or to hide the identities of the people making these decisions?  I am much more likly to lend my avatar to a group of State This & Thats than I am to have someone write, Paul Roemer is the brainchild behind this I^(*&^%%!.  I like committees of three, especially when the other two don’t know for what time I scheduled the meeting.

English 101.  The desk is hard, the task is difficult, and the task described above is impossible or at least out of the realm of mortals.  Does someone think checking off the items on the list will easily allow my doctor to follow me on business or vacation across the country?  We are all smarter than that and we need to stand up and lead.  The time to follow has ended.

MyHero