DEC 13, 2012 5:26pm ET

Related Links

Healthland Acquisition Targets the Continuum of Care
May 21, 2013
Rule Sets Pre-existing Coverage Rates
May 20, 2013
CMS Has $1 Billion in Grants to Encourage Innovation
May 15, 2013
NCQA Certifies First Wave of Medical Home ‘Content Experts’
May 13, 2013
EHR Boosts Care Coordination
May 10, 2013
Premier Survey: I.T. Top Capital Investment for Hospitals
May 3, 2013
How the 'Million Hearts' Program Improves Cardio Care
May 2, 2013

Efforts Heat Up to Accredit ACOs, Other Integrated Care Initiatives

Print
Reprints
Email

While accreditation firm URAC is advancing in its work to accredit “clinically integrated networks” such as accountable care organizations and medical homes, the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology is testing the waters about certifying ACOs.

URAC in November released for public comment proposed initial standards for integrated care with a deadline of Dec. 28. Now, it has announced the first three beta sites and is seeking more sites for testing in January and February of 2013. The organization expects to release the final accreditation standards in the spring.

The initial beta sites are Catholic Medical Partners IPA in Buffalo, N.Y.; multi-specialty group practice Essen Medical Associates P.C. in Bronx, N.Y.; and St. Vincent’s Health Partners in Bridgeport, Conn. URAC is seeking additional providers, such as single- and multispecialty practices; specialty networks covering chiropractic, vision or physical medicine; independent practice associations; and physician-hospital organizations. For more information, contact Lucia Rosenberg at lrosenberg@urac.org or 267-804-4784 before December 31.

CCHIT has been certifying electronic health records systems for meeting specific performance benchmarks for six years--several years before the meaningful use program began. The organization in October also became the certifying entity for a new stakeholder initiative to certify health information exchange products from EHRs and HIEs.

Now, CCHIT will develop a “certification framework” for ACOs to identify I.T. infrastructure components necessary to function as an ACO and identify gaps that would prevent providers from meeting their goals.

The organization is “looking at other opportunities that will complement our work and we believe expanding into the ACO environment is one way to do that,” says William Jessee, M.D., chair of the CCHIT board. But that doesn’t necessarily mean the decision is final, according to a spokesperson, who says the determination will be made following completion of the framework and more analysis of market need and acceptance.

Comments (0)

Be the first to comment on this post using the section below.

Add Your Comments:
You must be registered to post a comment.
Not Registered?
You must be registered to post a comment. Click here to register.
Already registered? Log in here
Please note you must now log in with your email address and password.
Twitter
Facebook
LinkedIn

As the feds ramp up enforcement of privacy and security rules, providers look to fill protection gaps.

Login  |  My Account  |  White Papers  |  Web Seminars  |  Events |  Newsletters |  eBooks
FOLLOW US
Already a subscriber? Log in here
Please note you must now log in with your email address and password.