From CHOP Person: "Re: CTO. The positioned was already filled
with someone who was brought on board several months ago and spent her
time lying low while a reorganization of the training/learning
organization occurred. End result: Talent and Learning Services headed
by CTO. Means IS (EPic) training moved to HR, among other things."
From Chiquita Bonanno: "Re: MaxIT. Heard it was sold. Any truth to
the rumor?" I haven't heard anything.
From Darius Price: "Re: Lakeland Regional Medical Center in
Florida. Heard they're about to sign with Epic."
From H.I.S. Stalker: "Re: eClinicalWorks. Has anyone noticed that
eClinicalWorks just got selected by Wal-Mart for their clinics?"
Yes ... everybody who read HIStalk last Thursday. I must write too
much stuff because people are e-mailing me hot stories all the time
that I've already mentioned. That's OK -- it makes me feel like a
futurist.
From Silent Bob: "Re:
Neil Pappalardo. Little known fact: he played lacrosse at MIT
(defense). He also refused to cram for exams as he felt that last
minute study gave an inaccurate reflection of his understanding of the
subject." See? He's the Bill Gates of our industry and
needs to go on record (in more ways than one: I did a quick calculation
of the value of his Meditech stock and it's $502 million). He sits in a
cube like the other 'Techies and when I interviewed Howard Messing, he was
writing a spell checker.
From bmoregirl: "Re:
Orion Health. Rumor is that Philips will acquire Orion Health in its
quest to be the solutions provider birth to grave. Good move on their
part if they do!" Unconfirmed,
but feel free to chime in if you've got the goods.
From Steelers58: "Re:
QuadraMed layoffs and offshoring. Funny how folks like Newman look at
real-world events as catastrophic. QuadraMed will now be able to
compete a little closer to the big guys by getting product to market
quicker." Someone sent me an intercepted e-mail document,
apparently QuadraMed's talking points about the layoffs. Summary:
outsourcing makes sense because higher demand means delivery has to be
faster and cheaper, the offshoring decision has nothing to do with
QCPR, and unnamed loudmouth bloggers (say, are my ears burning?) are
wrong in stating that QCPR expertise is running low when QuadraMed
still has over 40 product people, that Christine Stanfield was one of
12 analysts on the team, and over 30 engineers (15 old-timers) are
working on QCPR. Actually I didn't say that, a reader did, just to
nitpick.
Short-term pain aside, there's nothing wrong with offshoring, although
a company has to quickly change its core competency from coding and QA
to design and project management of code-to-spec techies who don't know
healthcare and, in some cases, English. Sometimes it works, sometimes
not, and the obvious problem is that when it doesn't, it's hard to put
a team back together stateside without losing years of momentum. I
don't have a strong opinion either way, especially since I bet no major
HIT company (Epic, maybe?) hasn't moved jobs offshore. You get more for
your money, but not always better.
Open source business intelligence software vendor Pentaho
of Orlando raises $12 million in Series C
funding. You have to appreciate the one-paragraph bio of the founder
that concludes, "... you can
usually find him near an empty Captain Morgan bottle or wandering
around in the woods with his GPS receiver." Or both.
Pretty hot company, apparently.
Microsoft says it has opened its HealthVault
platform to developers: open wrapper libraries, eventual release of the
.NET SDK, and publishing of HealthVault's XML interface protocol specs
to allow developers to private label the service (as I understand it,
anyway).
Google announces a pilot program with
Cleveland Clinic that will allow invited patients to share their Epic
MyChart personal health records with Google PHR. The announce suggests
that information from other providers will be importable and viewable
under the patient's control. Google also starts a Healthcare Industry Knowledge Center
that helps advertisers target healthcare consumers. Coincidence?
So, the two potentially big PHR players fire salvos, each entirely
characteristic: Microsoft flashes geek-arousing but proprietary (.NET)
techie toys and white papers while Google jumps right to go-live and
monetization while hiding the gadgetry under the covers. I'd call it
Google 3, Microsoft 1 early in the game. In fact, I'm taking away
MSFT's one point because you can't sign up for HealthVault without
having a Windows Live ID, another example of proprietary .NET crap that
has raised more than a few privacy concerns (just the ticket
for launching a PHR).
Another score update: Peter Pronovost and
patients 1; well-intentioned fools from HHS Office of Human Protections
0. HHS must have slapped some sense into OHRP because it has decided
that since infection checklists are already being used, it's no longer
research (duh). "We do not want to stand in the way of quality
improvement activities that pose minimal risks to subjects," its acting
director says, backpedaling from its previous interest in doing exactly
that until the uproar of reason became deafening. My interview here. Strangely, Peter says he got
no feedback whatsoever from the HIStalk interview (people usually get
overwhelmed afterward). I thought quality and IT were hand in hand, but
maybe I misjudged.
I forgot to mention a vendor dishing up HIStalk swag at HIMSS: Active
Data Services will be handing out "I'm Not Inga" buttons from Booth #
3787. Their plan is to have every person at the conference put one on
except the ever-honest Inga, who will thus reveal her true identify.
I'm glad I'm not the one dragging 26,000 buttons to the hall if so.
I've never seen any mention of HIStalk at HIMSS other than those
ill-fated buttons of two years ago, so it will seem strange to see all
the HIStalk and Inga stuff. You have to remember that I've only ever
even uttered the word HIStalk to maybe 4-5 people in my life outside of
the interviews and I've have never seen it anywhere except on my
computer screen. I'm not real sure what my reaction is going to be, to
be honest. Creeped out, I'm guessing. Imagine Inga: she has no idea how
anonymously famous she'll be since this is all new to her.
And for you home-bound non-HIMSS attendees, the HISsies winners will be
announced in a very different way, so check back here Monday night.
I'll be writing here every day, of course, with the kind of high-brow
analysis that you can't get elsewhere: who's booth sucked, which booth
babes were hot, how good or bad the opening session was, and whether
anyone particularly impressed or annoyed me. That's if the server can
handle the load of readers, that is, since the big boy went to his
knees in the crush of HIMSS traffic last year, requiring me to beef it
up.
Money guy Julian Allen is named to QuadraMed's board.
Medsphere brings OpenVista live at Century
City Doctors Hospital (CA).
Premise Corporation's bed management systems earn the endorsement of AHA.
Pick up a wristband and brochure on "A World Free of Medication Errors"
at HIMSS and First DataBank will donate $5.00 to two
non-profit medication error groups. I hadn't heard of either group, but
I see that Peter Pronovost is affiliated with the Josie
King Foundation, started with some of the lawsuit proceeds
after an 18-month-old died at Johns Hopkins from a medication error.
FDB is in booth 3747, according to the HIMSS exhibitor list.
Charleston Area Medical Center (WV) says it won't lay off employees or cut back on
pay raises despite a $25 million verdict against it, won in a lawsuit
by a local surgeon who said the hospital smeared his reputation and
revoked his privileges over malpractice insurance. Or lack of it,
actually, since he put up $1 million of his own money as a
self-insurance fund instead of buying commercial insurance, which CAMC
didn't like. Guess he won't need to work at all now.
Visicu and its EICU stock ticker are history. The company's $427
million acquisition by Philips is a done deal.
Emageon's Q4: revenue down 14.7%, EPS -$0.02
vs. $0.10.
E-mail
me. I'm probably too busy to respond, I'm sorry to say, since
I'm working absurd hours. But, I always read.
Sponsor Updates and Housekeeping
New interviews on HIStech Report: John Holton of SCI Solutions on
access management, Perry Russoniello of McKesson on
workforce management, and Jim Klein of QuadraMed on the
company's product line, including QCPR.
Jobs: Cerner Consultant, Microsoft SQL Report Writer, Application Developer.
eScription announces that three of the top
four outsourced transcription companies in the KLAS year-end report are
members of the eScription MTSO Alliance. eScription, of course, is #1
in its own KLAS category of Transcription and Back-End Speech
Recognition.
Sonitor announces a single patient use
wristband tag for its ultrasound locating system.
Inga's Update
A UK hospital has abandoned use of its Cerner
Millennium software in its ED, claiming it posed a clinical risk
because it couldn’t do simple things like print labels for
blood samples quickly.
Now here is something creative and fun to check out at HIMSS. BÖWE BELL + HOWELL will attempt to scan a half-mile long paper document equivalent in length to 2,880 standard, 8.5 x 11-inch sheets laid end to end. If they succeed, they will establish the Guinness World Record for scanning the longest document. So if you want to hang out for a couple hours watching a really long scan process, stop by Booth 4476 Monday afternoon.
Misys announces some recent sales,
including an upgrade and EMR sale to 19-provider Lumberton
Children’s Clinic, Misys Homecare 4.0 to Angel Home Health
and Hospice, Tiger and EMR to nine-provider McAllen Surgeons, and Tiger
and EMR to five doctor Central Wyoming Neurosurgery.
Coincidentally, I just got the following note from Poo
Flinging Monkeys: “Not
so much a rumor … not sure if they intend to tell the
clients, but Misys is moving Level 1 support, which includes simple
client requests and scriptable support solutions, to India. No layoffs
yet, but moving it all offshore can’t be far behind. Most
feel that ole Vern is simply cleaning it up to be sold and will jump
ship.”
From Nobody Important: “In regards to Merge Healthcare - refer back to HISTalk on 11/27/06. Some predictions were made." Good call – here is Mr. H’s old posting that Nobody Important is referring to: “I got a few e-mails concerning Ken Rardin, now CEO of Merge Healthcare. His past-company track record: offshoring, job cuts, merciless bottom line boosting, selling off assets in parcels. The first two have proven accurate at Merge. We'll see on the second two.”
The title of this study makes it clear where the authors’ opinion on PRHs and privacy risks: Personal Health Records: Why Many PRHs Threaten Privacy. Published by The World Privacy Forum, they note a number of possible privacy concerns, including the probability that PHR records could be subpoenaed more easily than a traditional HIPAA-protected record and the risk that identified health information is released to commercial data brokers.
McKesson announces a new strategic relationship with Proventys, a provider of personalized medicine knowledge services. McKesson plans to incorporate Proventys’ predictive modeling features into their clinical decision support solutions.
Deloitte Center for Health Solutions publishes a study that finds American consumers want more from their health care system than they're getting, including greater online connection to health care providers and medical records, customized insurance coverage, and wider access to emerging innovations, such as retail clinics. Sixty percent said they wanted online access to medical records, test results, and appointment scheduling; 25% would pay more for that service. I also was interested to see that 75% of the consumers want expanded use of in-home monitoring devices and online tools to reduce visits and allow individuals to be more active in their care.
A recent Siemens Healthcare IT Exchange newsletter includes current statistics for Soarian Implementations. They claim to have over 80 Soarian customers live with over 160 active implementations underway. They also provide a breakdown of the number of clients using various modules.
The Los Angeles city attorney files suit against Health Net Inc., charging “a wide range of unlawful, unfair and fraudulent acts and practices,” including secret schemes to drop patients needing expensive treatment.
Lots of loose ends to take care of before heading to Orlando, including making sure I have a big enough suitcase to bring home all those vendor trinkets! Well, and all the extra shoes. I have a feeling this won’t be a carry-on type trip for me. I’m looking forward to prowling around all the booths and striking up conversations with strangers. And if you have RSVP’d for the HIStalk party and are considering bagging it for a better offer, trust me when I say you won’t want to miss it! I will be the one laughing and drinking and thanking my lucky stars for having such a great job!
I have been watching the comments about Quadramed and finally had to laugh
today. I support them in their decision to move things to an outsourcing
company. Misys stalled QCPR and Quadramed, well lets just say, was just
stuck. Good products but the companies development side needed to be
shaken up. It will be interesting to see the product either be integrated
because the development is not done by biased people or a failure due to
the overseas decision. Nice post.