JASON Report Task Force June 18, 2014 David McCallie, co-chair Micky Tripathi, co-chair.

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Presentation transcript:

JASON Report Task Force June 18, 2014 David McCallie, co-chair Micky Tripathi, co-chair

Agenda Task force membership High-level workplan Charge Overview of JASON report Next steps 1

Task Force Members* Policy/StandardsMember NameOrganization StandardsDavid McCallieCerner PolicyMicky Tripathi Massachusetts eHealth Collaborative PolicyDeven McGrawManatt PolicyGayle HarrellFlorida State Legislator PolicyLarry WolfKindred Healthcare PolicyTroy SeagondollarKaiser StandardsAndy WiesenthalDeloitte StandardsArien MalecRelayHealth StandardsKeith FiglioliPremier, Inc. StandardsWes Rishel Policy/StandardsLarry GarberReliant Medical Group 2 *Additional members have been invited

Workplan MeetingsTask Wednesday, June 18 th 9:00-10:30am ET Review charges Identify action steps Tuesday, July 1 st 3:30-5:00pm ET Report deep dive Tuesday, July 22 nd 11:00am-12:30pm ET (we are looking to reschedule this meeting) Presentations? Tuesday, August 5 th 11:00am-12:30pm ET Wednesday, August 6 th DRAFT recommendations - HITPC Tuesday, August 19 th 11:00am-12:30pm ET Wednesday, August 20 th DRAFT recommendations - HITSC Tuesday, September 2 nd 11:00am-12:30pm Joint HITPC/HITSC meeting Final recommendations 3

Charge Analyze and synthesize feedback on the JASON report – Discuss the implications of the report and its impact on ONC strategies – Assess the feasibility and impact of the JASON report on ONC programs – Identify use cases and lessons learned from current experience – Establish specific recommendations that can be integrated into ONC’s strategic framework, specifically related to the interoperability roadmap 4

A Robust Health Data Infrastructure P. Jon White, MD Director, Health IT Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality

About the report Sponsored by AHRQ in collaboration with ONC and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation JASON is an independent scientific group that provides consulting services to the US government on matters of science and technology. It was established in 1959.

Study Charge How can complex data handling techniques and Internet-based technologies be applied to health care to promote the development of real-time integrated datasets at a scale seen in other industries? How can the various users of health data in the clinical research and public health communities be presented with tailored and highly specific data views in near real time based on routinely collected health data? As health data grows from megabits to gigabits per individual, what fine-grained analytics should be made available to patients and health care providers to guide health care decisions? What fundamental data management capabilities are needed to support potential future requirements in an open-ended manner? What are the national security consequences of not addressing comprehensive health data opportunities in clinical research and public health?

Briefing Organizations Arizona State University The Broad Institute Cornell UniversityDeloitte DigitalmillHIMSSIBM Kaiser Permanente Microsoft National Quality Forum Stanford University UC Davis UC San DiegoUniversity of Iowa Vanderbilt University The White House

Challenges identified Federation Jurisdiction Scalability User interface Interdisciplinary Front loaded cost Payer Business Model Exchange concept Data security Data integrity Access and curation Consent Intellectual property Legal liability

Key Findings The current lack of interoperability among data resources for EHRs is a major impediment to the unencumbered exchange of health information and the development of a robust health data infrastructure. Interoperability issues can be resolved only by establishing a comprehensive, transparent, and overarching software architecture for health information. The twin goals of improved health care and lowered health care costs will be realized only if health-related data can be used in the public interest, for both clinical practice and biomedical research. That will require implementing technical solutions that both protect patient privacy and enable data integration across patients.

Software Architecture For the purposes of this report, a software architecture defines a set of interfaces and interactions among the major components of a software system that ensures specified functionality.

Health IT Architecture Principles The patient owns his or her data Be agnostic as to the type, scale, platform, and storage location of the data Use published APIs and open standards, interfaces and protocols Encrypt data at rest and in transit Separate key management from data management Include metadata, context, and provenance of the data Represent the data as atomic data with associated metadata Follow the robustness principle: “Be liberal in what you accept, and conservative in what you send.” Provides a migration path from legacy EHR systems

Example Architecture User Interface Apps Middleware Apps Semantics and Language Translation Search and Index Functionality “chart/record” data “atomic” data w/ metadata Crypto Layer Data Storage (logical) Data Storage (physical) Data Transport (logical) Data Transport (physical) Stovepipe Legacy Systems Identity, Authentication, Authorization Patient Privacy Bundle Management Key and Certificate Management Published API

A patient privacy bundle is a collection of fine-grained settings of default permission and inheritance settings for access privileges to electronic health data. o Both atomic data and metadata must be associated with permissions o The patient controls access by electing a privacy bundle A fine-grained permission system is flexible, and can accommodate many different types of security policies The choice of a patient privacy bundle implies an assumption of different levels of risk by the patient in return for different benefits for themselves and society Patient Privacy and Risk Management

Recommendations (selected) Within 12 months, ONC should define an overarching software architecture for the health data infrastructure. EHR vendors should be required to develop and publish APIs that support the architecture of the health data infrastructure.

Topics for Discussion ONC should define an architecture this year. Patient privacy and related risk management should be addressed by the use of patient privacy bundles. The architecture should be supported by openly developed, published and tested APIs.

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