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Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jo Sr. Adv Office of the National Coordinator Health Information Techno

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Page 1: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

Toward Healthcare Interoperability

LeRoy Jones,Sr. Advisor

Office of the National Coordinator forHealth Information Technology

Page 2: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Disclaimer

• This presentation is meant to summarize the work the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC). In some areas, the presentation and/or the presenter may amplify elements of this work based on observations of ongoing discussions within ONC. None of the information presented here is meant to obligate the Federal Government to follow any particular course of action, nor to espouse an official position of the Federal Government, for the present or in the future.

Page 3: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Healthcare in America Is a Behemoth

• Caregivers • Organized care-delivery entities• Local / State / National authorities• Health Services (e.g. – freestanding

labs)• Public health surveillance • Medical research• Regional / socioeconomic care

disparities• Payers• Employers• Pharmaceutical industry• HIT – vendors, infrastructure,

integration, solutions, tools• Electronic and paper-based

information workflow• Regional information sharing groups• Standards & Interoperability groups

Page 4: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Understanding The Equations

Patients / ConsumersPatients / Consumers

++Healthcare SystemHealthcare System

== xx xx

Good OutcomesGood Outcomes

Bad OutcomesBad Outcomes

==Electronic InformationElectronic Information

Paper-based InformationPaper-based Information++

Patients / ConsumersPatients / Consumers Healthcare SystemHealthcare System

Page 5: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Understanding The Equations

== xx xx

Good OutcomesGood Outcomes

Bad OutcomesBad Outcomes

Electronic InformationElectronic Information

Paper-based InformationPaper-based Information

Page 6: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Current National Landscape

Standards

Silo Interoperability

Multi-stakeholder

Interoperability

Community Data Sharing

Public Health

Page 7: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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The President’s Vision

• Medical information follows the consumer so they are at the center of their care

• Consumers choose physicians and hospitals based on clinical performance results

• Clinicians have complete patient history, computerized ordering and electronic reminders

• Quality initiatives measure performance and drive quality-based competition

• Public health and bioterrorism surveillance are seamlessly integrated into care

• Clinical research is accelerated and post-marketing surveillance expanded

Page 8: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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July 21, 2004 Strategic Framework

• Goal 1: Inform Clinical Practice– Incentivize Electronic Health Record (EHR) adoption– Reduce risk of EHR investment– Promote EHR diffusion in rural and underserved areas

• Goal 2: Interconnect Clinicians– Foster regional collaborations– Develop a national health information network– Coordinate federal health information systems

• Goal 3: Personalize Care– Encourage use of Personal Health Records (PHR)– Enhance informed consumer choice– Promote use of tele-health systems

• Goal 4: Improve Population Health– Unify public health surveillance architectures– Streamline quality and health status monitoring– Accelerate research and dissemination of evidence into practice

Page 9: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Envisioned National Landscape

Community Data Sharing ala “RHIOs /

a NHIN”

Multi-community

Interoperability ala a “NHIN”

Standards codified in a

“NHIN”

Public Health utilizing a “NHIN”

Incentives

Page 10: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Interoperability Considerations

Technology

Application

Information / Data

Business

Technology

Application

Information / Data

Business

• workflow integration• competition suppression• policy/statutory satisfaction• interface accommodation• operational feasibility• switching costs & general economic feasibility• assurance of success

• syntactic equivalence• semantic equivalence• data matching & integration• underlying data generation function (context)• custodial responsibilities (e.g. – privacy & security)

• functional synergy• forward / backward compatibility• innovation accommodation

• enterprise compatibility• maintainability• scalability / capacity• upgrade strategy• service levels

Page 11: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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RFI – Overview

• Purpose: Obtain comments on how best to build, operate, and sustain the concept of a National Health Information Network for widespread interoperability and health information exchange.

• Questions: 24 questions in six categories:– General– Organization & Business Framework– Management & Operational Considerations– Standards & Policies to Achieve Interoperability– Financial, Regulatory Incentives & Legal Considerations– Others-Technical Architecture

• Response: Over 500 responses from all quarters of industry, and more than 15 federal agencies desiring to participate in analysis

Page 12: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Our Focus: The Electronic Health Record (EHR)

Orchestrated Data ExchangeOrchestrated Data Exchange

Incentivized AdoptionIncentivized Adoption

Good OutcomesGood Outcomes

Certified EHRCertified EHR

Harmonized StandardsHarmonized Standards

Standards

Other medical data

(e.g. – medical devices)

Page 13: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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EHRs

• There is no accepted definition of EHR software that informs buyers of what functionality should be expected

• There is little ability to switch vendors once a product has been selected

• Products across vendors are largely unable to exchange information

Page 14: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Certified EHRs

• A minimum functional set defines a baseline product

• Certification ensures interoperability through a NHIN

• Consumers have a pre-qualified set of vendors to consider for patronage

• Vendors may capitalize on interoperability features in products based on minimal product definition

Certified EHRCertified EHR

Page 15: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Standards

• Various standards authorities are publishing standards for different elements of healthcare

• Adoption is varied, with vendors pledging support, but often falling short of real utility

• Niche market has developed in systems integration due to inconsistent implementation of standards, or disregard of them

• The business case for incurring switching costs is often muddled at best: short-term narrow objectives are enemy of long-term, broad interoperability goals

Standard 1

Standard 2

Page 16: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Harmonized Standards

• Appropriate and mature standards used for healthcare use cases

• Gaps in standards filled in by qualified groups

• Overlapping standards resolved by market appropriateness and resolution expressed in certification

Standards

Page 17: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Data Exchange

• There is a recognition that standards are necessary but insufficient for interoperability

• There are few examples of working multi-enterprise, multi-organization data exchange models, though interest is high

– There is no dominant design

• Several in-house debates have arisen and slowed progress on a unifying strategy (e.g., central data storage, universal identifiers)

• Enterprise variations in areas like security pose challenges to migration to unified operational models

Page 18: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Orchestrated Data Exchange

• Information flow via a nationwide health information network

• Product certification that includes interoperability through a NHIN

• Implementation and testing coordinated on a local level

Page 19: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Migration to Interoperability

Vendors

SDOs

RHIOs

HealthEnterprises

Harmonized StandardsHarmonized Standards

Standards

Orchestrated Data ExchangeOrchestrated Data Exchange

Certified EHRCertified EHR

NC = National Coordination

NCNC NC

Page 20: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Migration to Interoperability

Vendors

SDOs

RHIOs

HealthEnterprises

Harmonized StandardsHarmonized Standards

Standards

Orchestrated Data ExchangeOrchestrated Data Exchange

Certified EHRCertified EHR

NC = National Coordination

NCNC NC

Page 21: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Migration to Interoperability

Vendors

SDOs

RHIOs

HealthEnterprises

Harmonized StandardsHarmonized Standards

Standards

Orchestrated Data ExchangeOrchestrated Data ExchangeCertified EHRCertified EHR

NC = National Coordination

Page 22: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Major Tenets

• Public / Private ownership of the problem and the solution

• Leverage federal buying power, employment power, and market power to bring about change

• Take advantage of best practices and build upon existing foundations

• Focus on actions, decisions, and measurable forward progress

Page 23: Toward Healthcare Interoperability LeRoy Jones, Sr. Advisor Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

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Thank you for your attention!

[email protected]://www.hhs.gov/healthit/

For copies of this presentation, [email protected]