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Nawanan Theera-Ampornpunt, M.D., Ph.D. Healthcare CIO Program Ramathibodi Hospital Administration School Sep. 15, 2016 SlideShare.net/Nawanan Except where citing other works

Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

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Page 1: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Nawanan Theera-Ampornpunt, M.D., Ph.D.

Healthcare CIO Program

Ramathibodi Hospital Administration School

Sep. 15, 2016 SlideShare.net/Nawanan

Except where citing other works

Page 2: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Stakeholders in Health Care

Patient

Providers

Policy-Makers

Public

Payers

Diagram modified from Supachai Parchariyanon’s 4Ps Concept

• High bargaining

power

• Benefit with

improved quality in

fee-for-service

• Needs to satisfy many “bosses”

• Faces up-front costs in health IT

investments

• Long-term benefits depend on

payment schemes

• Require data for

policy-making

• Limited budget

• Often face

bureaucracies

• Highly political

• Concerns about resource allocation &

community’s well-being, but not

necessarily individual patients

• Directly benefits from

improved quality of care

• Knowledge gap between

patient & providers

Page 3: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

The Intersection

Clinical Informatics

Public Health

Informatics

Consumer Health

Informatics

Patients &

Consumers

Providers &

Patients

Policy-Makers,

Payers, Public

(Also providers)

Page 4: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)
Page 5: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Public Policy in Informatics: A US’s Case

1991: IOM’s CPR Report published

1996: HIPAA enacted

2000-2001: IOM’s To Err Is Human & Crossing the Quality Chasm published

2004: George W. Bush’s Executive Order establishing ONCHIT (ONC)

2009-2010: ARRA/HITECH Act & “Meaningful use” regulations

Page 6: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Political Support Behind Health IT

“...We will make wider use of electronic records and other

health information technology, to help control costs and

reduce dangerous medical errors.”

Source: Wikisource.org Image Source: Wikipedia.org

President George W. Bush

Sixth State of the Union Address

January 31, 2006

?

Page 7: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

U.S. Adoption of Health IT

• U.S. lags behind other Western countries (Schoen et al, 2006;Jha et al, 2008)

• Money and misalignment of benefits is the

biggest reason

Ambulatory (Hsiao et al, 2009) Hospitals (Jha et al, 2009)

Basic EHRs w/ notes 7.6%

Comprehensive EHRs 1.5%

CPOE 17%

Page 8: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

President Obama Backs Health IT

“...Our recovery plan will invest in electronic health records and new technology

that will reduce errors, bring down costs, ensure privacy, and save lives.”

President Barack Obama

Address to Joint Session of Congress

February 24, 2009

Source: WhiteHouse.gov

Page 9: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

American Recovery & Reinvestment Act

Contains HITECH Act

(Health Information Technology for

Economic and Clinical Health Act)

~ 20 billion dollars for Health IT investments

Incentives & penalties for providers

Page 10: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

U.S. National Leadership

David Blumenthal, MD, MPP

National Coordinator for

Health Information

Technology

(2009 - 2011)

Farzad Mostashari, MD, ScM

National Coordinator for

Health Information Technology

(2011 - 2013)

Robert Kolodner, MD

National Coordinator for

Health Information Technology

(2006 - 2009)

David Brailer, MD, PhD

National Coordinator for

Health Information Technology

(2004 - 2007)

Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information

Technology (ONC -- formerly ONCHIT)

Photos courtesy of U.S. Department of Health & Human Services

Karen B. DeSalvo, MD, MPH,

MSc

National Coordinator for

Health Information Technology

(2014 - 2016)

Vindell Washington, MD, MHCM

National Coordinator for

Health Information Technology

(2016 - Present)

Page 11: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

What is in HITECH Act?

Blumenthal D. Launching HITECH. N Engl J Med. 2010 Feb 4;362(5):382-5.

Page 12: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

“Meaningful Use”

“Meaningful Use”

of a PumpkinPumpkin

Image Source & Idea Courtesy of Pat Wise at HIMSS, Oct. 2009

Page 13: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

“Meaningful Use” of Health IT

Stage 1- Electronic capture of health information- Information sharing- Data reporting

Stage 2

Use of EHRs to improve processes of care

Stage 3

Use of EHRs to improve outcomes

Better

Health

(Blumenthal D, 2010)

Page 14: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Health Information Exchange (HIE)

Hospital A Hospital B

Clinic C

Government

Lab Patient at Home

Page 15: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Health Information Exchange in the U.S.

Regional Health Information Organizations

(RHIOs)

State e-Health initiatives

Nationwide Health Information Network

(NHIN)

Still ongoing efforts, but with significant

progress

Page 16: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Other Public Health Informatics Applications

e-Health & m-Health m-Health in disaster management: #ThaiFlood

Data reporting to government agencies Claims & reimbursements

Diseases

Utilization statistics

Quality measures

etc.

Biosurveillance (case reporting vs. predictive)

Epidemiologic & health services research

Page 17: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Google Flu Trends

Source: Google.org/FluTrends

Page 18: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Thailand’s Biosurveillance

Source: www.biophics.org

Page 19: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)
Page 20: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Consumer Health Informatics (CHI)

“The field devoted to informatics from a

consumer view.” (Hersh, 2009)

Page 21: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

M/B/H Informatics As A Field

(Hersh, 2009)

Page 22: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Examples of Areas within

Consumer Health Informatics

Image Source: http://www.webmd.com/

Page 23: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Examples of Areas within

Consumer Health Informatics

Image Source: http://www.greatdreams.com/cancer-cure.htm

Page 24: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Examples of Areas within

Consumer Health Informatics

Image Source: http://www.hon.ch/, http://socialmarketing.blogs.com/r_craiig_lefebvres_social/2007/02/health_literacy.html

Page 25: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Examples of Areas within

Consumer Health Informatics

Image Source: http://michaelcarusi.com/2012/01/01/when-you-should-not-become-a-social-media-manager/

Page 26: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Examples of Areas within

Consumer Health Informatics

Image Source: http://ucedtech.wikispaces.com/Welcome

Page 27: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

mHealth

http://whqlibdoc.who.int/publications/2011/9789241564250_eng.pdf

Page 28: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Examples of Areas within

Consumer Health Informatics

Image Source: http://nutrition.about.com/od/recipesmenus/ss/learnlabels.htm

Page 29: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Class Exercise

Page 30: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Roles of ICT in Consumer Health Informatics

Access to information

Networking opportunities

Education/Self-study

Personalization

Effective & efficient communications

With providers

Among patients

Empowerment

“User Experience”

Page 31: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Issues in Consumer Health Informatics

Health literacy & IT literacy

Cultural diversity & sensitivity

Usability, information presentation

Impact of ICT on behavioral modifications

Integration with provider’s systems

Information exchange & interoperability

Business model

Privacy & security

Page 32: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)
Page 33: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Personal Health Records (PHRs)

“An electronic application through which individuals can

access, manage and share their health information, and that

of others for whom they are authorized, in a private, secure,

and confidential environment.” (Markle Foundation, 2003)

“A PHR includes health information managed by the

individual... This can be contrasted with the clinician’s record

of patient encounter–related information [a paperchart or

EHR], which is managed by the clinician and/or health care

institution.” (Tang et al., 2006)

Page 34: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Types of PHRs

Patient portal from a provider’s EHRs(“tethered” PHRs)

Online PHRs Stand-alone

Can be integrated with EHRs from multiple providers (unidirectional/bidirectional data sharing)

Stand-alone PHRs PC-based applications

USB Drive

CD-ROM or other data storage devices

Paper

Page 35: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

PHRs and Other Systems

(Tang et al., 2006)

Page 36: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Ideal PHRs

Integrated

Accessible

Secure

Comprehensive

Accurate & current

Patient able to manage sharing & update information

Engaging & educational

User-friendly, culturally & literacy appropriate

The “Hub and Spoke” Model

(Kaelber et al., 2008)

Page 37: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Use Cases of PHRs

Data entry/update by patients

Data retrieval by providers

With patient’s consent

“Break-the-glass” emergency access

Data update from EHRs

Privacy settings

Personalized patient education

Communications with providers

Page 38: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Data in PHRs

(Tang et al., 2006)

(Tang et al., 2006)

Page 39: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Other IT for Consumer Health

Traditional Web

MedlinePlus

Other sites

Social Media

The Usuals: MySpace, Facebook, Twitter

Blogs, forums

PatientsLikeMe

Telemedicine & Telehealth

Home monitoring/recording devices

Tele-consultations, virtual visits

http://media.nstda.or.th/video/viewVideo.php?video_id=1273

Page 40: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

Connecting People to a Healthy Future With

Personalized Care – Kaiser Permanente

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gxz9ZVvduGc

Page 41: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

More “Future Vision”...

Microsoft Health: Future Vision

http://www.microsoft.com/showcase/en/us/details/b112da1c-c918-

41ee-bb45-d6a553496168

NECTEC’s Smart Health

http://media.nstda.or.th/video/viewVideo.php?video_id=1273

Page 42: Health IT Beyond Hospitals (September 15, 2016)

References Blumenthal D. Launching HITECH. N Engl J Med. 2010 Feb 4;362(5):382-5.

Blumenthal D, Tavenner M. The “meaningful use” regulation for electronic health

records. N Engl J Med. 2010 Aug 5;363(6):501-4.

Connecting for Health. The personal health working group final report. Markle

Foundation; 2003 Jul 1.

Hsiao C, Beatty PC, Hing ES, Woodwell DA. Electronic medical record/electronic health

record use by office-based physicians: United States, 2008 and preliminary 2009

[Internet]. 2009 [cited 2010 Apr 12]; Available from:

http://www.cdc.gov/nchs/data/hestat/emr_ehr/emr_ehr.pdf

Jha AK, DesRoches CM, Campbell EG, Donelan K, Rao SR, Ferris TG, Shields A,

Rosenbaum S, Blumenthal D. Use of electronic health records in U.S. hospitals. N Engl

J Med. 2009;360(16):1628-38.

Kaelber DC, Jha AK, Johnston D, Middleton B, Bates DW. A research agenda for

personal health records (PHRs). J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2008 Nov-Dec;15(6):729-36.

Schoen C, Osborn R, Huynh PT, Doty M, Puegh J, Zapert K. On the front lines of care:

primary care doctors’ office systems, experiences, and views in seven countries. Health

Aff (Millwood). 2006;25(6):w555-71.

Tang PC, Ash JS, Bates DW, Overhage JM, Sands DZ. Personal health records:

definitions, benefits, and strategies for overcoming barriers to adoption. J Am Med

Inform Assoc. 2006 Mar-Apr;13(2):121-6.