HealthBlawg

David Harlow's Health Care Law Blog

    • Twitter
    • Facebook
    • LinkedIn
    • RSS
    • Email
  • About
  • Archives
  • Podcast
  • Press
  • Awards/Reviews
  • HIPAA
  • HCSM

HITECH Act part of stimulus package headed to President's desk: Steady, boys!

February 15, 2009

Some of us have now had a moment or two to read parts of the stimulus bill. One of the many stimuli included is the HITECH act, a $19 billion electronic health records funding provision.  This sort of action by the federales was long promised by Obama on the campaign trail: spending federal dollars to jump-start the leveraging of technology in order to improve health care quality at lower cost.  Setting aside the question of whether this piece of the bill will stimulate anything in time to help the economy (it won't), the question of the moment is whether this will be money well spent. 

On the one hand, it's designed to subsidize EHR adoption by physician practices and hospitals that otherwise might not be able to afford them (to the tune of up to $40K per doc).  To the extent that we believe that EHR adoption will promote efficiencies in excess of their costs (and yes, you do detect a note of healthy skepticism), that's a good thing.  On the other hand, it will almost certainly result in further entrenchment of current market leaders, to the possible detriment of providers and patients who do not necessarily need the high-cost offerings now on the market that are characterized by some observers as having limited "data liquidity" — which, if we're looking for interoperability, is a key thing to have.  Consider, for example, John Moore's excellent summary and analysis of the HITECH provisions on his Chilmark Research blog.  He notes that CCHIT certification is cued up to become the de facto template for EHR standards under the new law, and makes a convincing case for why that's not a great idea.  To argue the other side for a moment: if any standard is a couple of years out of date by the time it's adopted, does that mean we should have no standards?  I would think that the nature of the standard needs to be adjusted so that the standards themselves are less technology-specific and more function-centered.  Without some basic standards, we'll be out in the Wild West and interoperability will be a distant dream.

That said, I think John would agree that the standards finally adopted ought to allow for a variety of approaches: full-blown enterprise EHR systems, more compact offerings, and SaaS options as well.  Setting the standards shouldn't result in the ossification of the current selection of offerings out there.

There's an awful lot of money on the table.  Let's hope that it can be spent wisely, on a variety of approaches to an intractable problem: the wiring of this country's health care providers for the benefit of their patients and the collective fisc.

David Harlow
The Harlow Group LLC
Health Care Law and Consulting

Filed Under: E-Prescribing, Ehealth, EHR, Health 2.0, Health care policy, Health Law, HIPAA, HIT, Hospitals, Physicians

you might also like:

  1. Slouching towards HITECH Act implementation

  2. HITECH Act security breach rules now effective; federales give a six-month pass. Now's the time to kick compliance efforts into high gear

  3. HIPAA disclosure accounting rules, revisited per the HITECH Act

« Transforming Healthcare Summit in Boston February 26
Meta-analysis of stimulus package news coverage »

Trackbacks

  1. Hana Sommer says:
    December 15, 2011 at 3:51 am

    Hana Sommer

    Great, thanks for sharing this blog. Really Cool.

Follow me on Twitter

David Harlow 💉😷 Follow 43,200 17,541

Mastodon @healthblawg@c.im #HealthCare #MedDevice #Compliance #Privacy @MyOmnipod #HIPAA #digitalhealth #HarlowOnHC #pinksocks Tweets are tweets No more no less

healthblawg
healthblawg avatar; David Harlow 💉😷 @healthblawg ·
2h 1638640040317440001

The Harlow #Healthcare #Innovation Daily #digitalhealth #hcldr #HarlowOnHC Thanks to @DigitalSalutem #digitalhealth #healthtech

Image for twitter card

Eight steps to a successful AI implementation

information-age.com OpenText outline in Information Age the eight key implementation steps to help AI and machine lear...

paper.li

Reply on Twitter 1638640040317440001 Retweet on Twitter 1638640040317440001 0 Like on Twitter 1638640040317440001 0 Twitter 1638640040317440001
Retweet on Twitter David Harlow 💉😷 Retweeted
HCNowRadio avatar; HealthcareNOWradio @HCNowRadio ·
10h 1638517571107401733

NEXT at 8:30 am ET @healthblawg speaks with Steven Lane, PCP, informaticist and CMO @HealthGorilla, who has much to say about #healthdata, data on #SDoH, the power of data to improve healthcare and more. #HarlowOnHC #QHINs https://healthcarenowradio.airtime.pro/

Image for the Tweet beginning: NEXT at 8:30 am ET Twitter feed image.
Reply on Twitter 1638517571107401733 Retweet on Twitter 1638517571107401733 3 Like on Twitter 1638517571107401733 1 Twitter 1638517571107401733
healthblawg avatar; David Harlow 💉😷 @healthblawg ·
5h 1638583863076167706

ICYMI> Lissy Hu, President of Connected Networks at WellSky — Harlow on Healthcare https://healthblawg.com/2023/01/lissy-hu-wellsky.html?utm_source=twitter&utm_medium=social&utm_campaign=ReviveOldPost #digitalhealth #hcldr #hitsm

Image for the Tweet beginning: ICYMI>  Lissy Hu, President Twitter feed image.
Reply on Twitter 1638583863076167706 Retweet on Twitter 1638583863076167706 0 Like on Twitter 1638583863076167706 0 Twitter 1638583863076167706
Load More
Follow me on Mastodon

HIPAAtools

Hipaatools

The HIPAA Compliance Toolkit

The Walking Gallery

The Walking Gallery

Quick Links

  • Home
  • Categories
  • Archives
  • Podcast Interviews
  • HIPAAtools
  • HIPAA Compliance
  • Health Care Social Media
  • Speaking
  • In the Press
  • Blogroll

David Harlow

David Harlow

HealthcareNOW Radio

Connect with David

  • Twitter
  • Facebook
  • LinkedIn
  • RSS
  • Email
  • Subscribe
  • Contact
  • Book Me: Speaking
  • About
  • The Harlow Group LLC
Copyright © 2006–2023
HealthBlawg is a publication of The Harlow Group LLC. See Copyright notice and disclaimer.
Fair use with attribution and a link is encouraged. Click for more on David Harlow.
[footer_backtotop text="Back to top" href="#"]