EMR Stimulus

Providers will attest to meaningful use via CMS registration system

By Neil Versel

If nothing else, it should at least be easy to register to receive federal incentive payments for meaningful use of EMRs.

CMS has awarded a $1.6 million contract to CGI Federal, a Fairfax, Va.-based unit of Montreal-based technology consulting firm CGI Group, to revise the existing Provider Enrollment Chain Ownership System (PECOS) so physicians and hospitals can attest to meeting the requirements for meaningful use that will qualify them for Medicare bonuses. PECOS currently manages and verifies enrollment of Medicare providers and vendors.

Build-out of the online system to accommodate EMR incentive enrollment should take about 10 months, CMS says. Hospitals, however, could be eligible for the bonuses as soon as the end of December, since the rules for meaningful use, as currently proposed, only requires providers to meet the standards for 90 consecutive days in 2011. Medicare Part A, which applies to inpatient care, follows the federal fiscal year, which begins Oct.1.

For more information:
- see this Government Health IT story
- read this CMS notice about the contract award

Above article publish on http://www.fierceemr.com/story/providers-will-attest-meaningful-use-cms-registration-system/2010-04-22

April 23, 2010   5 Comments

Bill Would Expand Eligibility for ‘Meaningful Use’ Incentives

Yesterday, Reps. Patrick Kennedy (D-R.I.) and Tim Murphy (R-Pa.) introduced a bill (HR 5025) that would allow behavioral, mental health and substance abuse treatment providers to qualify for incentive payments for the “meaningful use” of electronic health records, Healthcare IT News reports.

Under the 2009 federal economic stimulus package, hospitals and physicians who demonstrate meaningful use of EHRs can qualify for incentive payments through Medicaid and Medicare.

The new Health Information Technology Extension for Behavioral Health Services Act of 2010 would extend eligibility for the incentive payments to:

  • Behavioral and mental health professionals and clinics;
  • Substance abuse professionals and treatment facilities;
  • Psychiatric hospitals; and
  • Licensed psychologists and clinical social workers (Merrill, Healthcare IT News, 4/16).

Above article publish on http://www.ihealthbeat.org/articles/2010/4/16/bill-would-expand-eligibility-for-meaningful-use-incentives.aspx

April 19, 2010   1 Comment

Case Western Reserve to help providers adopt EHRs in Ohio

By Mike Miliard

CLEVELAND – Case Western Reserve University (CWRU) School of Medicine has received nearly $8 million in federal stimulus money from the Ohio Health Information Partnership (OHIP), the state designated entity for health information exchange development. That funding will position the school as a regional extension center (REC), allowing it to help 1,765 healthcare providers in Lorain, Cuyahoga, Lake, Geauga and Ashtabula counties advance the use of health IT in their practices.

The CWRU School of Medicine is one of seven RECs in Ohio established by OHIP and made possible by funding from the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). An eighth REC was awarded directly by the federal government to HealthBridge, a not-for-profit health information exchange serving Greater Cincinnati and surrounding areas.

The federal and state initiative is providing smaller primary care practices with an incentive to early adoption of health information technology.

“Electronic health records tend to be financially out of reach for private practitioners and small practices,” said Julie Rehm, senior associate dean of the CWRU School of Medicine and associate vice president of strategic initiatives for CWRU. “If healthcare providers adopt early they are eligible for additional reimbursement from the Centers of Medicare and Medicaid Services until 2011. After that, the reimbursement declines and penalties kick in starting in 2015.”

The REC endeavor, as directed by the federal government, is targeted towards primary care providers, specifically, physicians—MDs or DOs who are family physicians, general internal, pediatric or OB/GYN, and other primary care providers such as nurse practitioners, nurse midwives, or physician assistants with prescriptive privileges and practicing in one of the previously mentioned areas.

The CWRU School of Medicine will provide administration and management to multiple contractors whose roles will vary by expertise but overall will help providers select products and provide training on how to use the technology to its fullest potential in order to improve patient care. This includes providing workforce support, implementation and project management, practice and workflow design, vendor selection, privacy and security best practices, progress towards meaningful use, functional interoperability and health information exchange.

The CWRU REC has a number of stakeholders, including University Hospitals, the Cleveland Clinic and Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative. In addition, the entities likely to participate in the CWRU REC include Kaiser Permanente, Medical Mutual of Ohio and CareSource.

“The School of Medicine is committed to improving the health of our community,” said Pamela B. Davis, MD, dean of the School of Medicine and vice president for medical affairs, CWRU. “We believe that HIT is a key tool in healthcare reform and we look forward to partnering with independent healthcare providers to encourage quick adoption of HIT. Once enabled, HIT provides a two-fold benefit: 1) improving patient care, for example, through electronic alerts that notify healthcare providers of a patient’s need for annual testing e.g., mammograms, and 2) by lowering healthcare costs by reducing redundant testing.”

The Case Western Reserve REC is expected to begin work sometime this month.

“Success for the CWRU REC will be measured in three ways,” said Rehm. “First, we must meet the milestones and metrics that are being asked of us by the federal government. Second, we must enable the earliest adoption possible which will allow primary care providers to pull in the maximum amount of federal dollars from reimbursements. And third, we must improve the quality of care through the utilization of this technology which will ultimately improve the health of Clevelanders.”

Above article publish on http://www.healthcareitnews.com/news/case-western-reserve-help-providers-adopt-ehrs-ohio

April 15, 2010   2 Comments

56 Organizations Agree on Priorities for “Meaningful Use” Program

According to recommendations from a large collaboration of organizations, the success of the new federal incentives program for health information technology (“HIT”) largely depends on a specific set of health improvement goals, a prioritized set of metrics, and the widespread participation of health care providers and patients.

Health care leaders from 56 different organizations filed a joint public comment on the program, which is part of the economic stimulus in the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (“ARRA”). The Markle Foundation, the Center for American Progress, and the Engelberg Center for Health Care Reform at Brookings coordinated the collaborative comments on the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services’ Notice of Proposed Rulemaking for the Electronic Health Record Incentive Program.

The joint public comment recommends priorities to the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (“HHS”), which will manage the new Medicare and Medicaid subsidies to doctors and hospitals for “meaningful use” of HIT starting in 2011.

The comment requests that HHS make clear a set of health improvement goals such as improving medication management and reducing readmissions to hospitals, so that everyone can contribute to these priorities.

Peter Basch, MD, senior fellow at the Center for American Progress, said: “As a practicing physician who has gone through the process of implementing health IT, I can say that it’s critical to set a bar that is ambitious but also achievable for the many diverse practices and hospitals that might participate in this program. We point out areas in which HHS can lower burdens on physicians without losing focus on the important goals of using health IT in ways that improve the patient’s experience and outcomes.”

Among other things, the collaborative letter stressed that the HIT program should encourage broad participation of providers by prioritizing the requirements necessary to receive payments and should enhance the ability of patients to obtain electronic copies of their health information.

Above article publish on http://pvwlaw.wordpress.com/2010/03/21/56-organizations-agree-on-priorities-for-%E2%80%9Cmeaningful-use%E2%80%9D-program/

April 9, 2010   No Comments

Get Moving to Catch Early EHR Meaningful Use Incentives

By Andrea Kraynak

Hospitals with electronic health records (EHR) may be eligible for meaningful use incentives as early as October 2010, and physicians follow soon after. What if a provider is hoping to take advantage of the incentives, but is still fully paper-based? Waiting for the release of final rules on the incentive program and EHR certification before moving forward may not be wise.

Providers should begin by looking into the reasons their facility doesn’t have many of the components that make up an EHR, or lacks an electronic system altogether. For example, if providers haven’t begun to invest in a system because of high up-front costs, they may be able to obtain funding that can help.

“Right now, there is a significant amount of money that is being funneled through the states for health IT,” says Chris Apgar, CISSP, president of Apgar & Associates, LLC, in Portland, OR. Depending on their location, healthcare providers may be able to take advantage of it.

“Go to the medical association in your state that you’re a member of, and put a little pressure on them,” he says.

If your state has grant or loan funding available, remind your association that there is money available and encourage them to lobby and partner with others to push your state to start allocating EHR funding, whether it happens to be low- or no-interest loans or outright grants.

If your state is not offering funding, there may be other programs you can find that offer no- and low-cost loans and other programs to provide support and consultative assistance, especially for small hospitals and physicians, says Margret Amatayakul, RHIA, CHPS, CPHIT, CPEHR, FHIMSS, president of Margret\A Consulting in Schaumburg, IL.

Smaller providers may also want to look into independent physicians associations (IPA), some of which are purchasing EHRs and making them available through a subscription fee. With this option, you have your own Web-based version, and you pay the IPA a certain amount annually to host the EHR, explains Apgar.

“This can be affordable because you don’t have to go out and buy a brand-new system and implement it and have someone administer it and all that,” he says. “You’re paying a subscription fee to use it, in essence, so you don’t have the cost of ownership.”

Remember, however, that subscription-based EHRs may end up costing more in the end, even though they are becoming more common, Apgar says.

If you are still searching for an EHR vendor, don’t forget about the big picture. With additional requirements coming soon, whether additional meaningful use measures or other capabilities your EHR will need to be ICD-10 compliant, look for a product and vendor that will be able to keep up.

“If you are in the position of buying a product today, you want to be buying a product that is going to take you through those stages,” Amatayakul says. “My sense is that you approach this by trying to address the long haul. Otherwise, you’re going to be faced with pieces of things that don’t work together real well.”

And avoid vendors who don’t have a sense of the upcoming changes and how they plan to address them.

“If there is little to no understanding on the part of the vendor as to what this means, or the vendor can’t describe for you what they plan to do, I would avoid that vendor,” Amatayakul says. “That means they’re not going to be able to keep up.”

Above Article Publish on http://www.healthleadersmedia.com/page-1/TEC-247509/Get-Moving-to-Catch-Early-EHR-Meaningful-Use-Incentives

April 6, 2010   No Comments

Panel Mulls Creation of Resource Web Site for ‘Meaningful Use’ Rules

The Health IT Standards Committee’s implementation work group is considering the development of an online collection of resources to help health care providers and vendors meet proposed “meaningful use” criteria for electronic health records, Government Health IT reports.

Earlier this year, CMS published a notice of proposed rulemaking describing how health care providers can demonstrate meaningful use of certified EHRs to qualify for incentive payments under the 2009 federal economic stimulus package.

At a recent work group meeting, health care providers asked for more guidance on how to comply with the meaningful use rules.

Aneesh Chopra — chair of the panel and U.S. Chief Technology Officer — said the work group could generate a digital library that would enable health care providers to access details about requirements for each meaningful use provision.

He said the panel’s blog could serve as an initial source of information. He added that the work group also could pass along user feedback to the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT.

The work group is scheduled to offer recommendations to the full Standards Committee on April 28. The panel might propose a formal resource Web site as part of its recommendations (Mosquera, Government Health IT, 3/31).

Above article publish http://www.ihealthbeat.org/articles/2010/4/1/panel-mulls-creation-of-resource-web-site-for-meaningful-use-rules.aspx

April 2, 2010   No Comments

Six States Get Federal Matching Funds for EHR Incentive Programs

On Thursday, CMS awarded federal stimulus funding to six state Medicaid programs for planning activities related to the implementation of an electronic health record incentive program, AHA News reports.

Under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, states can receive a 90% federal match for planning activities to:

  • Administer EHR incentive payments to Medicaid providers;
  • Ensure proper payments through audits; and
  • Promote interoperability and “meaningful use” of EHRs (AHA News, 3/25).

According to CMS’ announcement of the awards:

  • Colorado will receive $798,000;
  • Mississippi will receive $1.47 million;
  • Nevada will receive $1.05 million;
  • North Carolina will receive $2.29 million;
  • Utah will receive $396,000; and
  • Wyoming will receive $596,000 (Monegain, Healthcare IT News, 3/25).

Since November, CMS has awarded matching funds to 32 states and territories (AHA News, 3/25).

Above article publish on http://www.ihealthbeat.org/articles/2010/3/26/six-states-get-federal-matching-funds-for-ehr-incentive-programs.aspx

March 30, 2010   No Comments

Massachusetts Receives $24 Million in HIT Funding

By, Rich Silverman

Massachusetts, long a leader in the delivery of quality medical care to its citizens, has just received more than $24 million from the federal government to speed the adoption of electronic medical records (EMRs) throughout the Commonwealth.

According to a report in govmonitor .com, the Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) has authorized the release of the $24 million, the maximum that Massachusetts is entitled to under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA) of 2009. According to the report, $13.4 million will go to support the adoption of EMRs throughout the Commonwealth, and another $1.6 million will go toward creating a statewide high-speed communications system for medical data and records.

According to Massachusetts Governor Deval Patrick, “This federal funding will help reduce health care costs and improve patient care using proven technologies, many of which are developed right here in Massachusetts.” Lieutenant Governor Timothy Murray added that in addition to streamlining health care, the money would help create jobs.

The grants, given in furtherance of the adoption of EMRs, will be administered by the Massachusetts e-Health Institute, the state agency created for that purpose. One if its key goals, according to an article in MassHighTech.com, will be to ensure the privacy of all medical records in the state.

Couple the release of this funding with recent news that meaningful use has finally been defined and that ONC is taking definitive steps to develop a certification, and it looks like providers in Massachusetts are finally getting the tools they need to fully implement EMRs.

Above article publish on http://blog.pchealthstop.com/?p=849

March 25, 2010   No Comments

CMS Aims To Coordinate ‘Meaningful Use’ Rules With Other Regulations

CMS must pay special attention to ensure that the final version of the proposed “meaningful use” rule for electronic health records fits with other rules for standards and certification, as well at the interim final rule for the certification of EHRs, Government Health IT reports.

Earlier this year, CMS published a notice of proposed rulemaking describing how health care providers can demonstrate meaningful use of certified EHRs to qualify for incentive payments under the 2009 federal economic stimulus package.

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT also published an interim final rule describing required certification standards for EHR technology.

Tony Trenkle, CMS director of e-health and standards, recently stressed how the interplay between different regulations will be important in determining what health care providers will need to demonstrate to qualify for the incentive payments.

ONC policy analyst Steve Posnack said that CMS and ONC are coordinating their regulations to ensure that the standards set for determining meaningful use are in step with rules governing certification of EHRs (Mosquera, Government Health IT, 3/18).

Above article publish on http://www.ihealthbeat.org/articles/2010/3/19/cms-aims-to-coordinate-meaningful-use-rules-with-other-regulations.aspx

March 23, 2010   1 Comment

HHS Announces Additional $162 Million in Recovery Act Investment to Advance Widespread Meaningful Use of Health IT

Final awards of state health information exchange cooperative agreement program work to build health information exchange infrastructure throughout the states

U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius today announced awards to help states facilitate health information exchange and advance health information technology (health IT).  Funded by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, today’s  awards are part of the $2 billion effort to achieve widespread meaningful use of health IT and provide use of an electronic health record by every citizen by the year 2014.  Every state and eligible territory has now been awarded funds under this program.

“These critical investments will help unleash the power of health information technology to cut costs, eliminate paperwork, and help doctors deliver high-quality, coordinated care to patients,” said Secretary Sebelius. “States are important partners in improving and expanding our electronic health records system.  By improving the secure exchange of electronic health records between providers and hospitals within and across states, these awards mark a significant step in bringing our health system into the 21st century.”

The health information exchange HIE awards announced today provide approximately $162 million to 16 states and qualified state designated entities (SDEs) to facilitate non-proprietary health information exchange that adheres to national standards.  Health information exchange is critical to enabling care coordination and improving the quality and efficiency of health care.

“Today’s announcement of awards to 16 states and SDEs marks a significant milestone with all states now empowered to start their journey towards identifying innovative ways to break down theses barriers that prevent the seamless exchange of information, so that we can give patients the access to care they deserve and expect,” stated Dr. David Blumenthal, national coordinator for health information technology.  “States play a critical leadership role in advancing the development of the exchange capacity of healthcare providers and hospitals within their states and across the nation. Health information exchange will enable eligible healthcare providers to be deemed meaningful users of health IT and receive incentive payments under the Medicare and Medicaid electronic health record (EHR) incentive program.”

These cooperative agreements were awarded under the authority of Title XIII of ARRA, the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act which amends Title XXX of the Public Health Service Act by adding Section 3013, State Grants to Promote Health Information Technology. Section 3013 provides for the awarding of competitive grants to promote health information technology.  On February 12, 2010, HHS awarded $385 million to 40 states and SDEs.  The awards announced today complete the awarding of cooperative agreements funded by this program.

A listing of the state HIE competitive agreements announced today follow:

State/SDE

Award Amount

Agency of Health Care Administration (FL)

$20,738,582

The Maryland Department of Health and Mental Hygiene

$9,313,924

New Jersey Health Care Facilities Financing Authority

$11,408,594

South Carolina Department of Health & Human Services

$9,576,408

Iowa Department of Public Health

$8,375,000

Idaho Health Data Exchange

$5,940,500

State of North Dakota, Information Technology Department

$5,343,733

State of Alaska

$4,963,063

Nebraska Department of Administrative Services

$6,837,180

South Dakota Department of Health

$6,081,750

Department of Public Health, State of CT

$7,297,930

State of Mississippi

$10,387,000

Indiana Health Information Technology, Inc.

$10,300,000

HealthShare Montana

$5,767,926

Texas Health and Human Services Commission

$28,810,208

Louisiana Health Care Quality Forum

$10,583,000

Total

$161,724,798

Additional information about the state HIE program may be found at http://healthit.hhs.gov/portal/server.pt?open=512&objID=1488&parentname=CommunityPage&parentid=2&mode=2&in_hi_userid=10741&cached=true

And http://www.whitehouse.gov/the-press-office/sebelius-solis-announce-nearly-1-billion-recovery-act-investment-advancing-use-heal

Above article publish on http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2010pres/03/20100315a.html

March 17, 2010   No Comments