JAN 27, 2012 11:46am ET

Related Links

Hospital Laptop Theft = 2,159 Notifications
May 23, 2012
Obama: Make Federal Data Available, Friendly and Useful, and Soon
May 23, 2012
CMS Reminder: Register Early for EHR Meaningful Use
May 23, 2012
Security-Savvy Execs Share Their Secrets
May 22, 2012
Hospital Group Concerned with Expanding NPI
May 22, 2012
AHRQ Seeks Improvements to I.T. Workflow Toolkit
May 21, 2012
Small Breach includes Social Security Numbers
May 21, 2012

Bi-Partisan Report Seeks Effective Federal HIT Spending

Print
Reprints
Email

The Bipartisan Policy Center in Washington, founded by former Senate majority leaders, has issued recommendations to most effectively use federal dollars being spent on health information technology initiatives.

Much of the recommendations, however, call for initiatives already being done, although many remain in the earliest stages. For instance, the center calls for government and private purchasers and health plans to align incentives and payments with higher quality, care coordination and outcomes, enabled with I.T.

The center also calls for acceleration of health information exchanges and use of consumer health I.T. tools; private sector expansion of support for I.T. training and implementation assistance based on lessons from the federally sponsored college programs; further alignment of policies and programs with health I.T.; and comprehensive and clear guidance for privacy and security laws, including a national strategy for accurate patient matching.

Provider organization members of the task force, among others, include Peter Basch, M.D., medical director at MedStar Health; Russell Branzell, CIO at Poudre Valley Health System; former ONC head David Blumenthal, M.D., of Massachusetts General Hospital; Reginald Coopwood, M.D., CEO at Regional Medical Center of Memphis; Herb Pardes, M.D., vice chair at New York-Presbyterian Hospital; Robert Pearl, M.D., CEO at the Permanente Medical Group; and Tony Tersigni, CEO at Ascension Health System.

The full report is available here.

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

Looking to build better care coordination, health systems are buying physician groups in droves. Making the deal work, however, requires careful management on the I.T. front.

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.