Health Net has agreed to pay $250,000 and enter a corrective action plan to settle a lawsuit brought by Connecticut Attorney General Richard Blumenthal after a hard drive containing information of 1.5 million current and former members was lost or stolen.
Blumenthal sued the company in January, becoming the first state attorney general to wield new authority granted under the stimulus law to enforce the privacy provisions of the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996. The agreement resolving the case stipulates that the settlement does not represent an admission of liability or wrongdoing by Health Net.
Further information at Modern Healthcare, in a story by Gregg Blesch.
A legal blog (blawg) on national health information privacy, security, technology, and litigation.
Wednesday, July 7, 2010
Hospitals and HIT Benefits
Hospitals understand the importance of health information technology (HIT) and the benefits of its widespread adoption, yet as a field still face significant barriers to implementation according to a newly released survey of America's Most Wired hospitals and health systems.
This year's survey reveals continued progress for hospitals in patient safety initiatives:
Fifty-one percent of medication orders were done electronically by physicians at Most Wired hospitals, up from 49 percent last year. Over half (55 percent) of Most Wired hospitals match medication orders at the bedside through bar coding or radio-frequency identification, up from 49 percent in 2009 and from 23 percent five years ago. Additionally, Most Wired hospitals have made improvements when it comes to sharing information during care transitions. For example, new medication lists are electronically delivered to caregivers and patients 94 percent of the time when a patient is transferred within the hospital, 98 percent at discharge and 86 percent when transferred to another care setting.
"The survey results highlight that continued progress is being made but the full potential of health IT has not been met," says Rich Umbdenstock, president and CEO of the American Hospital Association (AHA). "Hospitals embrace health IT and recognize the many benefits it can provide to patients, but even Most Wired hospitals face barriers to adoption. We have asked that the federal government stimulate greater adoption by making Medicare and Medicaid incentive payments more widely available to hospitals and physicians so more hospitals can move in this direction."
Survey results speak to the fact that the full potential of health IT has not been met and that the use of electronic medical record (EHR) functions is still not widespread, even with independent physicians who practice within hospitals. For Most Wired hospitals, only 43 percent of independent physician practices have the ability to electronically document medical records, 41 percent have computerized physician order entry (CPOE) and 44 percent have decision support.
Gerry McCarthy, vice president of physician solutions at McKesson Corporation says providers need to be strategic about IT deployments. "You can't just start with CPOE as a first step," he says. "The best way to garner physician adoption of CPOE is to ensure that it adds immediate value to their workflow, which involves automating information across foundational care processes first, such as nursing documentation and bar-code medication administration, clinical monitoring and other features." The same type of thoughtful planning should be applied to information exchange, both with physicians and patients, he adds. McKesson is a major sponsor of the Most Wired Survey.
The 2010 Most Wired Survey is redesigned this year to reflect two years of work with an advisory group to continually improve the survey. The 2010 Most Wired Survey represents a new structure and methodology with an increased use of analytics and reporting. The advisory group was comprised of leaders from the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME), chief information officers, Most Wired staff and vendors. Additionally, the new methodology was made available to the entire CHIME membership for review and comment.
Hospitals & Health Networks conducted the 2010 survey in cooperation with McKesson Corporation and CHIME. The H&HN cover story detailing results is available here.
This year's survey reveals continued progress for hospitals in patient safety initiatives:
Fifty-one percent of medication orders were done electronically by physicians at Most Wired hospitals, up from 49 percent last year. Over half (55 percent) of Most Wired hospitals match medication orders at the bedside through bar coding or radio-frequency identification, up from 49 percent in 2009 and from 23 percent five years ago. Additionally, Most Wired hospitals have made improvements when it comes to sharing information during care transitions. For example, new medication lists are electronically delivered to caregivers and patients 94 percent of the time when a patient is transferred within the hospital, 98 percent at discharge and 86 percent when transferred to another care setting.
"The survey results highlight that continued progress is being made but the full potential of health IT has not been met," says Rich Umbdenstock, president and CEO of the American Hospital Association (AHA). "Hospitals embrace health IT and recognize the many benefits it can provide to patients, but even Most Wired hospitals face barriers to adoption. We have asked that the federal government stimulate greater adoption by making Medicare and Medicaid incentive payments more widely available to hospitals and physicians so more hospitals can move in this direction."
Survey results speak to the fact that the full potential of health IT has not been met and that the use of electronic medical record (EHR) functions is still not widespread, even with independent physicians who practice within hospitals. For Most Wired hospitals, only 43 percent of independent physician practices have the ability to electronically document medical records, 41 percent have computerized physician order entry (CPOE) and 44 percent have decision support.
Gerry McCarthy, vice president of physician solutions at McKesson Corporation says providers need to be strategic about IT deployments. "You can't just start with CPOE as a first step," he says. "The best way to garner physician adoption of CPOE is to ensure that it adds immediate value to their workflow, which involves automating information across foundational care processes first, such as nursing documentation and bar-code medication administration, clinical monitoring and other features." The same type of thoughtful planning should be applied to information exchange, both with physicians and patients, he adds. McKesson is a major sponsor of the Most Wired Survey.
The 2010 Most Wired Survey is redesigned this year to reflect two years of work with an advisory group to continually improve the survey. The 2010 Most Wired Survey represents a new structure and methodology with an increased use of analytics and reporting. The advisory group was comprised of leaders from the College of Healthcare Information Management Executives (CHIME), chief information officers, Most Wired staff and vendors. Additionally, the new methodology was made available to the entire CHIME membership for review and comment.
Hospitals & Health Networks conducted the 2010 survey in cooperation with McKesson Corporation and CHIME. The H&HN cover story detailing results is available here.
Tuesday, July 6, 2010
Electronic Discovery and Health Informatics
I am the guest columnist for this month's "Legal e-speaking" column in the Journal of AHIMA -- the American Health Information Management Association's monthly journal. The column addresses electronic discovery (e-discovery) in litigation and focuses on the judge's perspective. While not limited to electronic health information, the column exposes some of the major and minor issues that HIMs should address both before and during litigation.
Labels:
AHIMA,
e-discovery,
HIM
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