OmniMD™ EHR Version 11.0 Receives ONC-ATCB 2011/2012 Certification
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: January 5, 2011
Media Contact:
Ted Dave
pr@omnmd.com
tdave@omnimd.com
January 5, 2011 – Integrated Systems Management Inc announced today that OmniMD™ EHR, Version 11.0 is 2011/2012 compliant and was certified as a Complete EHR on January 4, 2011 by the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT®), an ONC-ATCB, in accordance with the applicable (eligible provider) certification criteria adopted by the Secretary of Health and Human Services. The 2011/2012 criteria support the Stage 1 meaningful use measures required to qualify eligible providers and hospitals for funding under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA).
According to Divan Dave, CEO, of OmniMD™ “This certification is another step in our commitment to provide providers with intuitive, easy-to-use, affordable technologies that help them improve patient care, reduce their costs and qualify for government incentives”.
The ONC-ATCB 2011/2012 certification program tests and certifies that Complete EHRs meet all of the 2011/2012 criteria and EHR Modules meet one or more – but not all – of the criteria approved by the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) for either eligible provider or hospital technology.
“CCHIT is pleased to be testing and certifying products so that companies are now able to offer these products to providers who wish to purchase and implement certified EHR technology and achieve meaningful use in time for the 2011-2012 incentives,” said Karen M. Bell, M.D., M.S.S., Chair, CCHIT.
OmniMD™ EHR, Version 11.0 certification number is CC-1112-484340-1. ONC-ATCB 2011/2012 certification conferred by CCHIT does not represent an endorsement of the certified EHR technology by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services nor does it guarantee the receipt of incentive payments.
The clinical quality measures to which OmniMD™ has been certified include:
NQF 0421 - Adult Weight Screening & Follow-Up
NQF 0013 - Hypertension: Blood Pressure Measurement
NQF 0028 - Tobacco Use Assessment and Cessation
NQF 0041 - Influenza Immunization
NQF 0024 - Weight Assessment and Counseling
NQF 0038 - Childhood Immunization Status
NQF 0034 - Colorectal Cancer Screening
NQF 0043 - Pneumonia Vaccination Status
NQF 0067 - CAD: Oral Antiplatelet Therapy
NQF 0084 - Heart Failure: Warfarin Therapy
OmniMD™ EHR Version 11.0 is also certified in CCHIT’s separate and independently developed certification program. OmniMD™ Version 11.0 is a pre-market CCHIT Certified® 2011, Ambulatory EHR. Integrated Systems Management Inc. has certified its EHR technology in both programs to provide greater assurance to its customers.
About Integrated Systems Management, Inc
Founded in 2000, OmniMD™ integrated Electronic Health Records and Practice Management (PMS) products and services, offers unparalleled reliability, ease-of-use, efficiency and customizability. OmniMD™ Ambulatory EHR has also earned a designation as a pre-market CCHIT 2011 Certification with the highest 5 Star Usability Rating ensuring OmniMD™ commitment to have a comprehensive, secure, scalable, intuitive and interoperable EHR system. OmniMD™ Ambulatory EHR Version 11.0 is CCHIT 2011 Pre-Market Certified, web-enabled and support devices ranging from Tablet PCs to Smart phones. OmniMD™ offers a comprehensive set of services such as Health Transcriptions, Document Management, Patient Portal, Patient Reminder and Eligibility Verification as part of an integrated solution under one roof helping practices to effectively addressing their financial, administrative, clinical, and regulatory needs. OmniMD™ Ambulatory EHR Version 11.0 is built as a true Software as a Service solution. It can be deployed as an Enterprise or a Subscription based Service as per the practice requirements. OmniMD™ is designed to exceed the present and future needs of the healthcare industry. OmniMD™ is robust, scalable, interoperable, secure, intuitive and customizable with rapid deployment model. OmniMD™ EHR has also achieved Surescripts® Gold Solution Provider status, which allows for interoperability with the nation’s community pharmacies - improving the safety, efficiency and quality of the prescribing process. Gold Solution Provider status is granted to vendors whose software products have surpassed Surescripts’ baseline product certification, by demonstrating a higher level of commitment to e-prescribing, enhanced security, excellent customer support and service. OmniMD™ is a division of Integrated Systems Management, Inc. – ISM Inc. - (www.ismnet.com) a leader in Software Development and Information Technology Consulting since 1989.
About CCHIT
The Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT®) is an independent, 501(c)3 nonprofit organization with the public mission of accelerating the adoption of robust, interoperable health information technology. The Commission has been certifying electronic health record technology since 2006 and is approved by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) of the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) as an Authorized Testing and Certification Body (ONC-ATCB). More information on CCHIT, CCHIT Certified® products and ONC-ATCB certified electronic health record technology is available at http://cchit.org.
About ONC-ATCB 2011/2012 certification
The ONC-ATCB 2011/2012 certification program tests and certifies that EHR technology is capable of meeting the 2011/2012 criteria approved by the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS). The certifications include Complete EHRs, which meet all of the 2011/2012 criteria for either eligible provider or hospital technology and EHR Modules, which meet one or more – but not all – of the criteria. ONC-ATCB certification aligns with Health Information Technology: Initial Set of Standards, Implementation Specifications, and Certification Criteria for Electronic Health Record Technology published in the Federal Register in July 2010 and strictly adheres to the test procedures published by the National Institute of Standards and Technology (NIST) at the time of testing.  ONC-ATCB 2011/2012 certification conferred by the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT®) does not represent an endorsement of the certified EHR technology by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services nor does it guarantee the receipt of incentive payments.
“CCHIT®” and “CCHIT Certified®” are registered trademarks of the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology.
January 6, 2011 No Comments
CMS Developing ‘meaningful use’ Guidance To Remove Contradictions
It was inevitable, given the short timeline and the apparent seat-of-the-pants nature of the rulemaking process, but CMS is preparing a guidance document intended to clarify several details and fix some inconsistencies in the final Stage 1 rule for meaningful use of EMR.
At last week’s meeting of the Health IT Policy Committee’s workgroup on meaningful use, Tony Trenkle, director of the CMS Office of e-Health Standards and Services, said the guidance will provide more detail on the objectives and measures in the rule and “should help clarify issues and help the [committee] plan for recommendations for future stages,” Government Health IT reports. The clarifications should be out “shortly,” Trenkle promised.
Meanwhile, the workgroup is looking ahead to Stage 2 of meaningful use, 2013-14, which will have higher thresholds of compliance than Stage 1, while trying not to deter hospitals and physicians from adopting EMRs. “We want to pay particular attention to smaller practices and hospitals,” workgroup chair Dr. Paul Tang said, according to Government Health IT. “We want to raise the tides but not sink the boats.”
For the next stage, the workgroup likely will attempt to find a happy medium between the initial standards for 2011-12 and the more rigorous requirements for Stage 3, which is set to begin in 2015. For example, Stage 1 requires physicians to write 30 percent of their prescriptions electronically and federal officials ultimately would like to see a 90 percent e-prescribing rate, so expect the Stage 2 standard to be 60 percent.
The Health IT Policy Committee would like to take some of the reporting burden off of providers, so Stage 2 probably will call for EMRs to have more standard and coded data for easier extraction. “”We hope that they are capturing the information as part of patient care and not a separate activity,” Tang said.
Expect the workgroup to have Stage 2 recommendations ready for public consumption by October, and to seek comments on its preliminary plan in December.
Source      :        http://www.fiercehealthit.com/story/cms-developing-meaningful-use-guidance-remove-contradictions/2010-09-27?utm_medium=nl&utm_source=internal
October 12, 2010 No Comments
HHS expected to announce state health IT funding
By Mary Mosquera
The Obama administration is expected to announce as early as Friday plans to award a series of grants to assist healthcare providers acquire and use health IT properly as well as to help states set up health information exchanges.
National health IT coordinator Dr. David Blumenthal is scheduled to join Vice President Joe Biden and HHS Secretary Kathleen Sebelius Aug. 20 for a discussion with physicians, nurses and administrators from Chicago’s Mt. Sinai Hospital. They are expected to discuss health reform, including health IT infrastructure and preventative care, according to a White House statement.
The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act provided the Office of the National Coordinator $2 billion to promote the meaningful use of health IT. Up to $300 million was intended to help establish state HIEs; another share would fund regional training centers to help physicians and hospitals incorporate health IT into their practices.
In an e-mailed statement today, Blumenthal laid out the administration’s case for the importance of the health IT funding targets.
Nationwide electronic HIE “provides the best opportunity for each patient to receive optimal care,” Blumenthal said. The technology will make patients’ complete medical information securely available to their health care providers where and when it is needed, “when clinician and patient are together facing medical decisions that can make a lasting difference.”
“My personal belief in this transformation is not based on theory or conjecture,” said Blumenthal, who has been a primary care physician for 30 years.
“I spent the first 20 shuffling papers in search of missing studies and frequently hoping, during middle-of-the-night emergencies, that I knew enough about patients’ medical histories to make good decisions. All that changed when I began to have access to patients’ electronic medical records,” he said, adding that it made him a better doctor. He started using electronic records 10 years ago.
With the U.S. spending $2.5 trillion annually on healthcare, it is clear that change is necessary, he said. “Better, faster, more reliable and efficient care also ultimately reduces system-wide costs,” he said.
To realize the benefits of a nationwide health information system will also require that personal health information remain private and secure. “Putting into place safeguards for the privacy and security of this information, when it is in electronic form, will be an ongoing priority that influences and guides all of our efforts,” he said.
Above article published on
August 21, 2009 No Comments
State Governments Join Push For Health IT
State governments around the country are working to facilitate, and in some cases, enhance, Washington’s stimulus-funded incentives for doctors and hospitals that adopt new health information technology. “A group of the nation’s governors and state officials has released a guide for state implementation of the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act,” the formal name for the portion of the stimulus bill, McKnight’s Long-Term Care News reports. A key recommendation is that state leaders create health information exchanges so providers can readily share information to improve coordination of care (8/7).
Meanwhile, members of the National Lieutenant Governors Association called for support of “advance interoperable health IT and its adoption among providers” in a resolution this week, Modern Healthcare reports. They call on states to adopt systems with the stamp of approval of the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology, a group affiliated with an e-health industry association (DerGurahian, 8/6).
Louisiana went a step further with “a bill that would create a loan program for physicians and hospitals hoping to buy an electronic health record system,” American Medical News reports. The state health department will seek other stimulus funding to seed the loans. The bill also will create the Louisiana Rural Health Information Exchange (Dolan, 8/6). (Other states, such as Maryland, have taken similar action in recent weeks).
At the local level, Florida officials are reviving two e-health projects in the Miami and Palm Beach areas to pursue the stimulus funding, the Sun-Sentinel reports. One project, run by the South Florida Health Information Exchange, had succeeded in digitizing the records for dozens of clinics and setting up protocols to share them with a local hospital, before funding dried up and the program became dormant (LaMendola, 8/6).
Above article published on
http://www.kaiserhealthnews.org/Daily-Reports/2009/
August/07/Health-IT-Fri.aspx
August 10, 2009 No Comments
Medicaid, health IT to see billions from stimulus package signed by Obama
The law offers bonuses for health IT adoption but will penalize physicians who don’t have adequate systems by 2015.
By Doug Trapp, AMNews staff.
Washington – President Obama on Feb. 17 signed a $787 billion stimulus bill that directs about $150 billion toward speeding adoption of health information technology and maintaining health care coverage, among other provisions.
The sweeping measure — the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 — provides nearly $90 billion in temporary increased federal Medicaid funding, delays four cost-cutting Medicaid regulations and spends a net of about $19 billion to encourage physicians and others to adopt health IT.
Obama said the enactment of the stimulus package and the Feb. 4 enactment of the Children’s Health Insurance Program reauthorization are big steps in health care. “We have done more in 30 days to advance the cause of health care reform than this country has in a decade.”
The American Medical Association applauds the investments in health IT and coverage for the poor and newly unemployed, wrote AMA Executive Vice President and Chief Executive Officer Michael D. Maves, MD, MBA, in a Feb. 11 letter to Sen. Max Baucus (D, Mont.), chair of the Senate Finance Committee.
The stimulus also provides $500 million to help train physicians through the National Health Service Corps, a provision widely supported by physician organizations. “This program is integral to rebuilding the primary care physician pipeline,” said Ted Epperly, MD, president of the American Academy of Family Physicians.
$19 billion of the stimulus bill is for incentives to encourage health IT adoption.
But few Republicans backed the stimulus measure. The House adopted the bill Feb. 13 with no Republican support. The Senate approved it the same day with votes from only three moderate Republicans: Sens. Olympia Snowe and Susan Collins of Maine and Arlen Specter of Pennsylvania. The final bill is a compromise between earlier versions adopted by the House and Senate.
Many Republicans, including Senate Minority Leader Mitch McConnell (R, Ky.), lambasted spending in the measure that they said would not stimulate the economy quickly. McConnell also criticized Democrats for not accepting more GOP input on such a massive spending bill.
Some Republican lawmakers, such as Phil Gingrey, MD (R, Ga.), also worried that the stimulus is not offset by new revenues and therefore will increase the national debt. “I don’t know how our children and grandchildren are going to pay for this,” Dr. Gingrey said.
“Significant” health IT support
Under the stimulus law, physicians and other health professionals are eligible for tens of thousands in health IT incentive payments via Medicare or Medicaid through 2016. But in 2015, penalties for non-adopters begin.
Medicare-participating physicians who adopt a certified electronic health record system by 2011 or 2012 and use it in a way that the government deems “meaningful” — a term to be defined later — could receive up to $44,000 over a period of up to five years. The incentives will be limited to 75% of the physician’s Medicare charges in any one year.
Health IT grants and loans from the federal government won’t become available until 2010.
Physicians who have caseloads of at least 30% Medicaid patients and who also meet the health IT adoption standards are eligible for nearly $64,000 in support during the same time frame. Medicaid incentive payments are limited to 85% of physicians’ Medicaid charges. Pediatricians can qualify if their patient mix is 20% Medicaid, but they would be eligible for only two-thirds of the incentive payments available to physicians meeting the 30% standard.
This health IT funding is “very significant,” said Robert Doherty, the American College of Physicians’ senior vice president for governmental affairs and public policy. “Our sense is for a lot of physician practices, that may be the tipping point where it begins to make business sense to consider plunging into that pool and buying a certified EHR.”
Physicians cannot apply for incentives in both Medicare and Medicaid, but hospitals can, said Erica Drazen, ScD, managing partner for emerging practices at health IT consultant CSC’s Global Healthcare Sector.
Also, while physicians must use an EHR system to qualify for the stimulus incentive payments, they need not own one. The measure provides $2 billion to the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology for health IT grants and loans, but those won’t become available until 2010, Drazen said. She expected private firms to offer new financing options for the EHR systems or to offer them through leases.
But the stimulus measure will penalize physicians, beginning in 2015, if they have not become meaningful EHR users. These doctors face a 1% reduction in Medicare fees that year. The yearly cut would phase up to 3% in 2017 and beyond.
The ACP would prefer that the penalties not apply if, for example, a shortage prevents EHRs from being available to physicians or if another factor not in physicians’ control prevents them from meeting the health IT standards, Doherty said.
Drazen said existing EHR vendors and consultants will be strained by the demand created by the health IT stimulus. “We’re going to have a real short supply of people who know how to do this well.”
Sustaining Medicaid
The $87 billion in stimulus going to state Medicaid programs should help avoid health coverage cuts to low-income people. But states still may need to trim other parts of their Medicaid programs, because many have budget shortfalls exceeding their stimulus funding, said Ann Kohler, director of the National Assn. of State Medicaid Directors.
The enactment could be significant for physicians in California. State lawmakers and Gov. Arnold Schwarzenegger have been struggling to close a roughly $42 billion budget deficit.
California’s Medicaid program would receive more than $11 billion in stimulus funding over 27 months, according to the California Medical Assn. But to qualify for the additional funds, states first must maintain or restore Medicaid eligibility and renewal procedures to their status on July 1, 2008. California lawmakers would need to reverse legislation enacted late in 2008 requiring people on Medicaid to re-enroll twice a year instead of once.
“This is another great opportunity for state lawmakers to maximize federal assistance,” said CMA President Dev A. GnanaDev, MD.
The stimulus offers another boost to states by extending moratoriums on three Medicaid rules through July 1, 2009. Those regulations, issued by the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, would have reduced federal Medicaid spending by billions. The new law also delays until July a CMS rule that reduces some states’ Medicaid rates by aligning the program’s hospital outpatient services definition with that of Medicare.
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Above article published on http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2009/02/23/gvl20223.htm
April 29, 2009 No Comments
Practices paperless before 2012 could maximize Medicare bonuses
Physicians can earn tens of thousands in IT incentives, but they must act quickly to achieve the biggest benefit and avoid penalties.
By Chris Silva, AMNews staff.
Washington – The recent economic stimulus package provides a significant investment in health information technology that could benefit many physicians. But the government is expecting doctors to do their part to implement health IT and is prepared to penalize those who don’t.
Over the next decade, the federal government is projected to spend more than $35 billion on Medicare and Medicaid bonuses to physicians, hospitals and others that adopt certified electronic health records. Because of the Medicare penalties that eventually will apply to nonadopters, however, the net spending level will be only about $20 billion over 10 years.

Physicians with approved EHRs in place before 2011 or 2012 will be eligible for the maximum Medicare incentive payments allowed by the stimulus. They will receive bonuses equal to 75% of their allowed Medicare Part B charges — up to a sliding cap — in each of the five years after adoption. The maximum of $18,000 in the first year phases down to $2,000 in the fifth year for a total five-year bonus of up to $44,000 for early adopters.
Doctors who wait until 2013 or 2014 to have EHRs in place will be eligible for smaller bonuses. The 2013 adopters can capture a maximum of $39,000 over four years, while the 2014 adopters can claim up to $24,000 over three years. Medicaid will have its own five-year bonus schedule that will offer as much as $64,000 to eligible physicians who don’t claim Medicare bonus money.
Once the chance for bonuses ends, Medicare starts penalizing physicians who have not responded to the incentives. Doctors who have not adopted an EHR before 2015 and who fail to obtain a hardship exemption will see a 1% cut to their Medicare pay, a reduction that phases up to 3% for 2017 and remains each year after that.
Simply setting up any paperless system is not enough to earn bonuses and avoid penalties. The stimulus package stipulates that physicians must adopt a qualifying EHR and use it in a “meaningful way.” Meaningful users are defined as physicians who demonstrate to the Health and Human Services Dept. that they are using electronic prescribing; that their technology is connected in a manner that provides for electronic exchange of health data to improve quality of care; and that they submit information to HHS on clinical quality measures.
No longer a question of “if”
Some physicians already have begun to move away from paper, and they would rather act sooner than later to avoid penalties down the road. “The question now isn’t if, but how and when, because physicians are feeling a sense of inevitability,” said Todd Rowland, MD, executive director of HealthLINC.org in Bloomington, Ind., a regional health information exchange that covers a multicounty area. “We need to figure out how to implement it in an economical, management-oriented approach that requires as few work-flow sacrifices as possible.”
Dr. Rowland added that he doesn’t expect physicians to like the implementation process — or the possibility of penalties if they don’t do it right — but that it makes sense for physicians younger than 55 in particular to get on board. He estimates that more than 50% of physicians in Bloomington’s metro area and more than 75% in the rural area have adopted EHR systems.
Early EHR adopters can get up to $44,000 in a Medicare bonus or $64,000 in a Medicaid bonus.
While the stimulus also provides Medicaid incentives, physicians can’t have it both ways — they must choose either Medicare or Medicaid bonuses, said Heidi Echols, a partner at the law firm McDermott, Will & Emery in Chicago.
In an effort to prevent additional “double-dipping,” physicians who report using an EHR system that is also capable of e-prescribing no longer will be eligible for the e-prescribing bonuses that went into effect this year under the Medicare Improvements for Patients and Providers Act. On the other hand, Medicare penalties for those not e-prescribing by 2012 will sunset after 2014, so that no physician will be subject to double penalties for failing to e-prescribe and failing to use an EHR.
Now that Congress has set up the incentive structure for adoption, President Obama and his administration also must promote interoperability of EHR data so the records don’t become information “islands,” said David J. Brailer, MD, in an article published online as part of a series on health IT in Health Affairs’ March/April issue.
Dr. Brailer was the first National Coordinator for Health Information Technology at HHS from 2004 to 2007 and is now chair of Health Evolution Partners, a health care investment firm based in San Francisco. He said physicians particularly need to be wary of vendors from which they purchase IT services, as systems that become obsolete could set back progress.
“What it boils down to is, are you buying EHRs that you can use and keep for a long time, or is it a system that in two or three years goes kaput?” he asked. “We’re trying to avoid doctors having to start over again with electronic records during their career.”
The next steps
The stimulus act requires HHS by Dec. 31 to develop an initial set of standards, implementation specifications and certification criteria for EHR system adoption. It also authorizes the department to provide competitive grants to states for implementation loans to health care entities.
The national health IT coordinator also will be authorized to make available a qualifying EHR system to physicians and others for a nominal fee. Doctors who do not purchase the government’s system can purchase a qualifying system from a vendor of their choice as long as it meets certain standards, including interoperability requirements.
The American Medical Association will seek clarification from HHS on the cost of the government system and when it will be available. The department must determine more details on how it will spend the stimulus dollars and how doctors can access them.
Once those details are available, physicians must examine the cost-benefit breakdown. According to a May 2008 report from the Congressional Budget Office, estimated total costs for implementing a typical office-based EHR are about $25,000 to $45,000 per physician. Each physician would then need to spend about $3,000 to $9,000 per year to maintain the system.
Above article published on http://www.ama-assn.org/amednews/2009/03/16/gvsa0316.htm
April 27, 2009 1 Comment
