What is the patient’s experience today?

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Presentation transcript:

CommonWell Health Alliance “Interoperability for the Common Good” Scott Stuewe Director, Cerner Network Chair, CommonWell Health Alliance Program Management Committee

What is the patient’s experience today? Interoperability Interoperability occurs when information flows freely across organizational, vendor and geographic barriers. “In 2013, health information exchange among physicians was relatively low: 4 in 10 (39 percent) reported they electronically share data with other providers, but only 14 percent electronically share data with ambulatory care providers or hospitals outside their organization” http://www.hhs.gov/news/press/2014pres/08/20140807a.html Interoperability is the ability for information that can be used to advance patient care to move between health care entities regardless of the technology platform in place or the location where care was provided. Interoperability occurs when information flows freely across organizational, vendor and geographic barriers.   The entire health care industry will benefit from interoperability, but ultimately, patients stand the most to gain from interoperability. Health care professionals can provide better care to the patient by being able to see the different care touch points that make up the patient’s medical history. Past problems, allergies, medications, immunizations, lab results and more help the provider make an informed decision about patient care, and remove the burden from the patient from having to carry physical copies of his records from doctor’s office to doctor’s office, or more challenging, rely on memory of past treatments to provide context to his care givers. Intraoperability – connecting different organizations that use the same technology platform – only solves a piece of the problem. Imagine if your Samsung cell phone could only talk to other Samsung phones, but not to an Apple iPhone. That would be an example of intraoperability. When providers only have access to intraoperable networks, they’re getting an incomplete picture of the patient’s care. What is the patient’s experience today?

“Connect my Community” (outreach) Hospital Specialist Primary Care Registry “Connect my Community” (outreach)

“Find the Patient’s Records” Hospital Specialist Primary Care Therapy Low value My Competitors Far Away

Imagine the internet without Google…

National Health Data Exchange

CommonWell Health Alliance Introduction May 2012 BPC Meeting March 4, 2013 at HIMSS13 Farzad Mostashari challenge to the group: “you need to solve this problem yourselves” For background/reference: It was at a May 2012 BPC meeting, in response to observations by Farzad Mostashari, MD, ScM | National Coordinator for Health IT, HHS; Aug. 7, 2013, that the federal government was legally constrained from implementing an official “National Patient Identifier,” that the initial impulse to create CommonWell emerged. Farzad’s challenge to the group that “you need to solve this problem yourselves” was a significant motivation in the launch of CommonWell. Cerner’s Dr. David McCallie and RelayHealth’s Arien Malec first started discussions following this meeting, with the official announcement of the CommonWell Health Alliance occurring on March 4, 2013 at HIMSS13 in New Orleans. From there we fast forward a few months to March 4, 2013, when 5 competitors sat on stage together at HIMSS and announced that they would work together to improve the way healthcare records are shared among a patient’s providers. The made a commitment to create the same kind of industry collaboration that enabled interoperability in banking and cellular phone service. The agreed to build the ability to share clinical documents into their applications.

Our Vision We are an independent, not-for-profit trade association open to all HIT suppliers and others devoted to the simple notion: That health data should be available to individuals and providers regardless of where care occurs and; That provider access to this data must be built-in to HIT at a reasonable cost for use by a broad range of health care providers and the people they serve More specifically, they built an independent not-for-profit trade association – CommonWell Health Alliance - open to all HIT suppliers and others devoted to the simple notion that health data should be available to individuals and providers regardless of where care occurs and that provider access to this data must be built-in to HIT at a reasonable cost for use by a broad range of health care providers and the people they serve In short, the Alliance aims to change the public’s perception about the availability of their health data by providing the first nationwide, patient directed network of networks to make this a reality.

CommonWell Health Alliance Members Interoperability for the Common Good 70%+ of acute EHR 24%+ of ambulatory EHR Market leaders in lab, long-term care, retail pharmacy and more Founding Members Contributor Members General Members Source: SK&A, a Cegedim Company and KLAS “EHR Vendor Market Share by Physician Size” SK&A. January 2015. © 2014 KLAS Enterprises, LLC. All rights reserved. www.KLASresearch.com Initial Service Provider

CommonWell Health Alliance for Record Location and Retrieval Community Hospital CommonWell Services Consent Management Identity Management Record Locator Document Query Document Retrieval Long-Term Care Lab Trusted Data Access Remember this visual from the Challenges section? [Note: Orange words relate to the orange arrows. Blue words relate to the blue arrows.] Given the synopsis of our progress, now let’s talk about the services that CHA will provide. The initial launch included the these core services: Consent Management: Deliver a patient-authorized means to simplify management of data sharing consents and authorizations. Identity Management: Provide a way for HIT suppliers to quickly and accurately identify patients as they transition through care facilities. Record Locator: Help providers locate and access their patients’ records, regardless of where the encounter occurred, by providing a “virtual table of contents” that documents available data from each encounter location. Query & Retrieve: CommonWell is not a data repository. We are merely a broker, making document query and retrieval quicker and more seamless. Trusted Data Access: Provide authentication and auditing services that facilitate trusted data sharing among member systems. What is unique about our approach is that in addition to organization registration, which is what HIEs do, we have a much more active and engaged enrollment and consent validation process that leads us to have stronger patient matching – which is happening at the national level, not just at the organization or HIE level CommonWell will provide a more streamlined way to support record query and retrieval, putting the patient at the center of the decision and of the information. You can almost think of this as an ATM model where you can withdraw cash from any bank’s ATM regardless of where your account resides. Value: information is shared quickly and accurately CommonWell is not a data repository. We are merely a broker, making document query and retrieval quicker and more seamless. IDN Physician Office

Together we can accomplish great things Together we can accomplish great things. Health care is personal and it is too important to stay the same.   (Speaker note: option to reference your family in the photos (can replace the bottom-middle image) – i.e. “This is my family, and I believe in a better system, for them, that’s why I’m with Cerner)