HIStalk
From
Bill Kilgore:
"Re: Cerner. Cerner
opens an office in Dublin is kind of ironic since the Irish
don’t have the money or the emerging market as the Middle
East. Maybe they should consider Doha since there is fresher
growth market in new hospital construction."
From Gob Bluth: "Re: QuadraMed. QuadraMed's
recent layoff and offshore decision is for the entire Quantim
HIM Suite. Management told the remaining Quantim
employees that 'some of you will get the opportunity to go to
India to train the new team members.' Sounds a lot like POWs
being forced to dig their own graves before being summarily
executed."
From HITPundit: "You are starting to cross
the line where you exalt your sponsors every chance you get.
You have no practical or actual knowledge of the sponsors other than
what they tell you. Are you a bought blogger?" Well, I
noticed your IP address is of a vendor and not a charity, so you're not
working for free either, right? I believe that close reading
will prove that "exalting" just means mentioning them along with
anything factual that I happen to know -that they're nice people or
that they've announced something. Nothing more. I don't think you'll
find a case where I recommended them or their products specifically
unless I actually do have first-hand experience with them as a
customer, which I do in some cases. The rules I've followed for years
are
here.
Sponsors get only one thing that non-sponsors don't: I'll sometimes
mention their announcements. The agreement they sign even says so, that
they're fair game otherwise. I'll compromise with you since I've been
thinking about doing this anyway: I'll put sponsor stuff in its own
subsection of HIStalk. Worth a read, but you can skip it if you like
(you could do that now, of course, but I'll even mark it clearly for
you). Fair enough?
From
Dr. Lisa Cutty:
"Re. Wikipedia. Hi,
since the English Wikipedia page about HIS is sadly nonexistent, I
would like to suggest to create a competition about who
writes the best definition. The winner text will be published
in Wikipedia. Come on folks, let's define us..." Say,
you're treading on government contractor work there, young sportsman.
OK, I suppose we can accept volunteers. Anyone?
From
Jerry Riggs:
"Re: Halamka. His reputation
was made before the BIDMC fiasco (give Cisco some blame for that, too)
and his response just burnished it. Since then, HITSP, NEHEN,
Harvard Med. He does a lot. It helps that he doesn't need
to sleep like the rest of us mortals. I've known John for a
long time. Sure, he's got a firm grip on marketing and spin,
but what top-notch senior executive doesn't? The difference with John
is that he backs it up with dedication to his work, an
impressively deep fund of knowledge, plain well-spoken
openness, and as you noted, exemplary
graciousness. I've seen him post-talks, where he
politely takes time to speak to just about everyone who comes
up to him. Add another category, above 'seems like a good guy.' John is
one." I dare you to test him at HIMSS. Walk up at the IHE
booth or wherever you see him and strike up an excruciatingly dull
conversation and do most of the talking yourself, spouting the most
asinine nonsense you can think of. I bet he'll listen attentively and
make you feel like his equal and compliment you on your perspective.
That's my experience, anyway, from watching him in action. I'm jealous
of him too, but willing to give credit where it's due. Maybe I'll do
the black turtleneck under black jacket thing at HIMSS as my homage.
From
Festus Peashooter:
"Re: QuadraMed.
That’s right, they were the first to see the value of care
based revenue cycle … but alas, all we hear about is that
they are cutting back on Misys /CPR staff. But this always happens in
an acquisition like this. The staff that remain need to ask themselves:
would they be better off with a ‘dead’ product that
would be limping along under Misys, left eventually to die on the vine,
or are they in a better place now that someone has taken a real
interest in keeping it going, even investing money trying to improve
it? If you are a QuadraMed CPR employee today … which do you
want?"
From
Soul Survivor:
"Re: QuadraMed. Why
the surprise about layoffs from QuadraMed? Keith Hagen is from the Tom
Skelton/Misys school of leadership: focus on management weaknesses and
blame the staff. ABC - anyone but the CEO."
From
Murphy Blue:
"Re: care-based
revenue. I don't know whether this will go anywhere, but it's the first
time I've seen prominent press about an insurer's proposal to help with
health care costs (while believing they can also help
themselves...novel idea.)" Link.
SIS, which has been pretty quiet lately,
brings
on Chris Giglio as SVP of customer operations and Eric
Nilsson as CTO, coming from McKesson and Infor, respectively.
McKesson
will
move 500 people from its Louisville and Broomfield (CO)
offices to Westminster.
Jim Burton, formerly of FCG,
takes
a VP job with Emerging Health Information Technology.
Richard Granger of NHS is officially
finished
there, to be replaced with two positions: a CIO and a project executive
for Connecting for Health.
Revolution Health
claims
its sites have passed WebMD as the #1 health property on the Web, but
it doesn't sound all that convincing that it means much.
E-mail me.
Inga's Update
Thank you Imelda M. for reminding me that in addition to finding the
perfect party outfit, there is the shoe dilemma as well. Do you wear
the sensible shoes for walking around the convention hall all day or do
you become a fashion slave and get the 5” spikes? You guys
just don’t understand how hard it is ensure we are objects of
your fantasies.
A dress makes no sense
unless it inspires men to want to take it off you.
~Françoise Sagan
I clearly opened up a can of worms about the LA hospital issues. From
Dr. Webber:
“When MLK-Harbor
was forced to close, 75% of their ED patients starting coming to
Harbor-UCLA (where I work). We are in the same "system" but we don't
get their medical records, so often we have no idea what their primary
care looks like. We have asked for additional resources from corporate
to handle the influx of patients, but have received few useful
additional resources. In fact, our CEO had to take a 10% budget cut on
top of more patients from King. That's insult upon injury. CMS was
explicit in their exit interview. They stated (!) they knew the problem
was not a fault of the hospital, as we can't stop people from coming in
to the ED, and we have only so many staffed beds and ICU/PCU beds to
hold them. We have minutes from our Governing Body meetings where we
are quite literally yelling for help, but have been ignored.
MLK-Harbor. Olive View. Now Harbor-UCLA. CMS is sending a message to
the LA County Board of Supervisors to get out of the healthcare
business. Did you know that the last time JCAHO did an unannounced
there were 10 surveyors? How many hospitals get that type of
scrutiny?”
And from
Dr. Shepherd:
"The next time
you’re in LA, I doubt if you become ill you’ll end
up at a county hospital. They are the symptom, not the disease. The
disease is massive overcrowding and it isn’t just in county
hospitals. Coupled with a 20% nursing shortage in the state and
mandated nursing ratios, no money, no staff and no interest from a
board of supervisors that only respond to crises, the safety net for LA
is a warning for the rest of the nation. Hey, board, you’ve
got a crisis to deal with now! It is a mess. As a practicing ED MD for
over 30 years, LA is NOT unique. As a patient, I’m scared. As
a doctor, I’m fatalistically depressed. As a consumer,
I’m mad as hell and I don’t want to take it
anymore. I think everyone is looking for a solution, but not willing to
be so drastic as to throw out the entire system and start over. Think
about 20% of our healthcare dollars going to big insurance management
and what could be done with it. We must also re-introduce personal
responsibility and buy-in. 'Americans are willing to consume all the
healthcare someone else is willing to pay for.”’
The NHS
says
there is no cause for alarm over the misplacement of 6,000 smartcards
for accessing patient records. Why do I feel good over the news that
the US is not the only country with ridiculous security lapses?
St. Mary’s Medical Center in Huntington, WV
renews
its agreement with MED3000 to provide revenue cycle
management, PM services, consulting, and coding services for their
physicians.
Encentuate
is
selected by the 80-provider group Northwestern Memorial
Physicians Group in Chicago to provide single sign-on and
authentication services.
E-mail Inga.
Sponsor Updates and Housekeeping
Jobs:
Network
Analyst,
Systems
Support Applications Analyst,
Director
of IS.
Reminder: sign up to your right for instant updates when I write
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New postings at
HIStech
Report: EnovateIT mobile devices, Design Clinicals medication
reconciliation, McKesson's Horizon Expert Visibility, Sage Software,
and Healthia Consulting. A good read before HIMSS.
Jerome H. Carter, MD, FACP Replies to Bignurse
I really enjoy your blog. I saw the post by BigNurse and
thought I would respond since implementation problems are of particular
interest to me.
The meaning of “implementation” is very important
and is rarely formally defined for EHR projects. Heeks and
Mundy published a white paper in the UK that I think addresses this
matter quite well. They define types of implementation failures and by
extension, successes. They define the following types of failures:
- The total failure of a system never implemented or in which
a new system is implemented but immediately abandoned. A much-reported
example is that of the London Ambulance Service’s new
computerised despatching system. This suffered a catastrophic failure
within hours of implementation, leaving paramedics unable to attend
health care emergency victims in a timely manner (Health Committee,
1995).
- The partial failure of an initiative in which major goals
are unattained or in which there are significant undesirable outcomes.
Anderson (1997:87), for instance, cites the case of “An
information system installed at the University of Virginia MedicalCenter
[which] was implemented three years behind schedule at a cost that was
three times the original estimate.”
- The sustainability failure of an initiative that succeeds
initially but then fails after a year or so. Some of the case mix
systems installed under the UK National Health Service’s
Resource Management Initiative fall into this category. They were made
fully operational and achieved some partial use but with limited
enthusiasm from staff for using them. Ultimately, they were just
switched off (HSMU, 1996).
- The replication failure of an initiative that succeeds in
its pilot location but cannot be repeated elsewhere. Although
presenters may not realise it at the time, every health informatics
conference is jam-packed with replication failures about to happen;
with wonderful innovations that are tested once and then disappear
without trace. As an audience, we hear all about the pilot, but we tend
not to hear about the replication failure.
In my experience partial failures are quite common with EHRs. Very
common examples are:
- Key features are never utilized or under utilized (quality
and preventive care features)
- Not all providers in the practice use the EHR for all
patient documentation
- Features are never implemented or do not work (lab
interfaces being the best example).
Partial implementations are costly in a number of ways because
paper/electronic hybrids are more difficult to secure, search, analyze
and maintain. Also, ROI is not maximized until the
implementation is complete. From this perspective
“go-live” is simply the start of an implementation.
Unfortunately, I have seen my share of “declared”
implementations as well. These are situations in which an organization
flails at an implementation until everyone is tired of it (or someone
has been fired). They then “declare” that whatever
state of implementation they have achieved is what was
intended. Alternatively they look for the most palatable
excuse for their lack of success (the doctors were uncooperative, the
software did not work as expected, the CIO was not the “right
person” for the task, our organization is unique.)
Practically, I believe that organizations would do well to use at least
a two-tiered approach to defining a successful implementation.
Level One success would occur when all patient data that originate at
the practice site are entered directly into the system. Level
Two would occur when key features/functions (e.g. quality/safety) are
used by ALL providers as part of routine care.
A Level Three might then be defined as all patient data, whether
external or internally generated, are in the system. However, this
requires interoperability capability that is beyond organizational
control. I would guesstimate that maybe only 10-15% of organizations
make it to Level Two. IMHO.
Jerome Carter is a
principal with Neck,
Time, and Money Informatics, Inc., an EHR consulting firm
based in Atlanta.