HIStalk
From
Kevin Gnapoor:
"Re: HIMSS Analytics
mention of HIStalk. It came off better than you reported. Of surveyed
healthcare IT execs, 65% reported reading a technology blog in the last
year. When asked to mention specific blogs read, 13% identified
HIStalk, whereas no other blog was mentioned more than once."
Glad to hear that, although I'd like think I can compete well with
mainstream publications and not just blogs. It makes Inga happy to be
anonymously famous.
From
Cady Heron:
"Re: Misys. Misys
will have a big roll-out of an SaaS solution. athenahealth may start
feeling some heat if Misys can overcome its current dismal perception
in the market. As my contact stated, athenahealth is nothing more than
a service operation for handling billing with a software front-end."
From
Broadway Joe:
"Re: Keane. We run
their RCM product and some clinical apps and we were happy to
see there recent press releases with some new deals. I know they are
actively installing new business in the NY/NJ area. I think
the CHS move was a provider acquisition that is causing the
move away from Keane."
From Gretchen Wieners: "Re: Leapfrog. I agree
Leapfrog has become irrelevant, but they started with the realization
that employers held the purse strings in many cases and had motive for
lower cost and better quality of care and better negotiating power
given their role. So they analytically looked at what would have the
biggest impact on medication errors and chose them. That
included CPOE, which can play a key role if the
system is designed for clinical decision support. The others
were also no-brainers, e.g. the intensivists. But, they never used
their clout and their demands were unfunded. Once the MDs balked, they
caved."
From The PACS Designer:
"Re: Oracle VM.
Virtualization has been mentioned in past posts by
TPD. Oracle has a new software offering called Oracle VM,
which makes it easier to implement virtualization within
the institution at a relative low cost for both Oracle and
non-Oracle applications. Edward Screven, Oracle's chief corporate
architect, states 'Oracle is the only software vendor that
combines the benefits of server clustering and server
virtualization technologies to deliver integrated clustering,
virtualization, storage, and management for grid computing'."
Link.
From Cliff Pantone:
"Re: AMIA. This job
posting on the American Medical Informatics Association website
nearlymade me spurt my morning coffee over the screen: 'Applicants
should have experienced first-hand the creation and rollout of a
commercial software product, or else should possess a good sense of
humor.' Too true, too true..."
From Jerry Aldini:
"Re: Cerner in the
Middle East. I wonder if Cerner will sue IBA since the hospital IBA
supposedly took from them was never in the Cerner-Health Authority
contract? Also, I have heard that the delayed go-live is mainly due to
data center delays. In the Middle East, there is NO experience
on the client side when it comes to projects of this magnitude. If a
data center is not ready, PCs are not ordered, or end
users are not trained, it's the vendor's default."
From Lazlo Hollyfield:
"Re: Cerner. It's
funny how an organization supposedly trying to improve healthcare
treats its own employees poorly in health benefits and policies. Cerner
offers only high-deductible health plans. It created its own TPA (whose
medical director was a Cerner associate) to handle employee healthcare
claims and Cerner employees manage precertifications, claims, and
medical records, meaning the company is looking at the medical records
of its own employees. HealtheExchange uses a second-tier
provider network that leaves major metro areas uncovered, so if an
associate falls seriously ill while working at a client site where the
plan has no in-network providers, the associate gets stuck with the
bill for any charges over the usual and customary amount, typically
60-75% of the provider's claim." I'll just jump in to
disclaim that I don't know this officially, so you'll have to take
Lazlo's word for it unless somebody wants to second his emotion.
From Charles Bronson:
"Re:
RevolutionHealth. They already have a PHR, soon to be CCD-structured."
From Dr. Lisa Cutty:
"Re: Cerner. We get
rumors from Asia about Oracle buying Cerner. I know they are
interested in the company since 2004 and Cerner is using
Oracle's platform, but are there any new developments?"
None I've heard. The floor is yours if you have.
MedStar Health, the Baltimore/Washington system in which Azyxxi was
created, chooses
Cerner Millennium for all seven of its hospitals, although not all
apps. A couple of people e-mailed me wondering if that means anything
beyond the obvious. I'm guessing no. From Art Vandelay: "I wonder if they used the
funds from the sale of Azyxxi to pay for Cerner? Ironic ... at least
there was no mention of replacing the ED module. Do you really still
need your own CDR/Viewer if you are going away from a best-of-breed
strategy?"
This must have been embarrassing. HealthTrio is working with CMS in a
PHR pilot, which requires going through a security audit. Auditors
connected their equipment to power in a server rack and blew a power
circuit. That was fixed, but somehow the connector on the
server's RAID controller card was broken. They failed over and
were up again within a couple of hours, but this morning went down
again due to DNS problems. It's running, although not very
well, and another outage this evening is needed to catch up
the primary server.
I'm guessing that Sumter Regional Hospital won the MRI since the Sumter
folks sent me an invitation to attend a joint Siemens-SRH
announcement tomorrow morning. Good for them. Unusually smart marketing
by Siemens, too.
Inga and I finished the first of several new HIStech Report interviews, this
one with Stratus Technologies. Pretty interesting stuff. We're proud of
how cool our reprint
format (warning: PDF) looks considering we're moonlighting
amateurs.
Jobs in cities: Nashville,
Chicago,
Denver,
Los
Angeles. I see we now have 230 jobs listed.
Meditech's Magic 5.6 is now CCHIT
certified.
Premise had a 260% increase
in revenue in 2007 (2,265% over five years). I interviewed
CEO Eric Rosow in November about hospital throughput.
Ann Carey of St. Vincent's HealthCare (FL) is
promoted to VP/CIO.
Suffolk RHIO in New York chooses
HealthUnity.
Last chance for HISsies
voting.
Former State of California CIO J. Clark Kelso
replaces
the receiver of the state's prison system. I had to look up what that
meant: California's prisons provided such bad medical care that the
federal government seized the system in 2005, calling conditions
deplorable despite annual medical costs of over $1 billion. The guy in
charge is the receiver.
Cleveland Clinic is a
big
sponsor of Arab Health Congress and CIO Martin Harris will
speak. Mr. HIStalk was not invited to attend as a guest of the
countries he so richly supports through his regular gasoline purchases,
so he sends his regrets.
Dubai
seems pretty cool.
MedAvant's shareholders
approve
the sale of its preferred provider network for $23.5 million.
Wal-Mart
starts
an employee pilot of its Dossia PHR system, a quick rollout
considering it wasn't long ago (September 2007) that Omnimedix was
replaced with Children's Boston as the technology supplier.
Busted: a Massachusetts doctor
is
reprimanded for reviewing the electronic medical records of a
nurse he was dating. The hospital caught him in an audit and gave him a
written warning, but the medical board fined him. Another employee
found that the doctor had checked out her OB/GYN records, so she's
suing the him and hospital for $250,000.
The Massachusetts Attorney General
is
investigating the $16.4 million parting gift that "nonprofit"
(despite a $157 million "surplus" in one year) BCBS of Massachusetts
gave its retiring CEO this month.
Varian Medical Systems
announces
Q1 numbers: revenue up 18%, EPS $0.43 vs. $0.37.
The government is anguishing over those five acronyms that are holding
the industry at bay due to imprecise definitions, but there's another
mammoth problem that's keeping Uncle Sam awake at night: the job
descriptions of HIT employees. HHS secretary Mike Leavitt
asks
AHIC to come up with job descriptions and their required credentials in
the next year. It is mentioned that the shortage of trained HIT experts
is getting critical and not just in the US.
E-mail me.
Inga's Update
Misys PLC
announces
its interim results from the first six months of their fiscal year.
While overall revenue for the company (including banking and financial
services) was up about 3%, healthcare saw only a slight revenue rise
and order intake was up only 1% over the same period last year. One of
the most painful numbers has to be the 34% decrease in initial license
fees. No doubt they are hoping MyWay will turn things around for the
rest of the year.
Medcomsoft
signs
a $750K agreement to put EMR in Puerto Rico’s largest owned
drug store chain. The deal includes licenses for 100 physicians.
Just the other day I was wondering if I should consider a health
savings account and if anyone really used them. Well, according to
HSA
Bank (warning: PDF), quite a few folks are using them, given
the bank’s status as the first HSA administrator to surpass
$500K in HSA deposits.
Revenue cycle management provider Accuro Healthcare Solutions
files
a registration for an IPO to raise up to $144M.
McKesson
adds
Intel executive Andy Bryant to their board. Bryant is an Intel
executive vice president and chief administrative officer.
HIMSS announces that registration for this year’s conference
is up 17% over this time last year and more top-level execs than ever
are attending. Mr. H swears it’s because I’ll be at
the Healthia/HIStalk soiree, but I think he’s just saying
that to get me to wear some fancy ball gown.
Read
about Meriter Hospital and details on its $30 million all-digital
hospital in Madison, WI. Epic is called the
“centerpiece” of their showcase for the latest in
healthcare technology for patients with cardiovascular disease.
E-mail
Inga.