Advisory panel submits recommendations to HIT Policy Committee regarding health data exchanges

On August 19, 2010, the "tiger team" advisory panel submitted a letter to the HIT Policy Committee, established pursuant to the HITECH Act, proposing new safeguards for personally identifiable information on health information exchanges.  Via Bloomberg Business Week:

The recommendations were developed in response to a specific set of privacy-related questions raised by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. They touch upon and clarify topics such as patient consent and the use of third-party service providers in the exchange of personally identifiable health information.

<...> One of the bigger recommendations relates to patient consent. The direct exchange of electronic patient data between health providers for treatment purposes does not require any additional patient consent, the panel noted. The same rules that apply to paper or faxed exchanges of health information should apply in the electronic realm as well.

HIT Policy Committee will have to review and approve the proposed safeguards.  You can read more about the proposed standards after the jump, and can read the letter in full by clicking here.

 

Bloomberg Business Week described some of the proposed safeguards:

However, any data exchange that involves a third-party does require specific and "meaningful" patient consent, the letter noted. Any such consent also needs to be transparently and easily revocable by the patient at any time, the panel said.

The letter also recommended further exploration of technologies that allow individuals to exercise more granular control over the data for instance permitting the exchange of certain kinds of health data, but not all.

Third-party service organizations should also not be allowed to collect, use or share personal health data for any purposes other what's specified in their service agreements, the panel recommended.

Third parties should also be required to retain personal health data only for as long as it is reasonably needed and should then be required to destroy the data, the panel said.

All third parties having access to patient health information also need to comply with the privacy and security requirements of HIPAA.

"Panel drafts privacy recommendations for health data exchanges," Bloomberg Business Week (August 19, 2010).

ONC names 17 members of the privacy and security workgroup

The Office of National Coordinator for Health IT named 17 members of the newly formed privacy and security workgroup of the HIT Policy Committee.  According to Government Health IT:

The work group will be co-chaired by Deven McGraw, director of the Health Privacy Project at the Center for Democracy and Technology, and Rachel Block, executive director of the New York eHealth Collaborative and deputy commissioner for health IT transformation at the New York State Department of Health.

Their team will advise the Policy Committee on such matters as how safeguards for the exchange of health information should fit into the “meaningful use” test for health IT incentives that ONC has been working on.

The ONC has previously announced the establishment of a separate workgroup devoted to creation of a national health information network, which, of course, will have to deal with its own set of privacy and security concerns.  There is also a privacy and security workgroup under the HIT Standards Committee.

Government Health IT provides a list of the other members of the workgroup:

Some of the privacy and security work group members named today already sit on its parent Policy Committee. They are: are Dixie Baker, SAIC; Paul Egerman, consultant; Judy Faulkner, Epic Inc.; Gayle Harrell, a consumer representative with the state of Florida; Dr. Mike Klag, Johns Hopkins University School of Public Health; Latanya Sweeney, Carnegie Mellon University; and Paul Tang, Palo Alto Medical Foundation and Policy Committee vice chairman.

New members who are not current members of the Policy Committee are: Dr. Peter Basch; a healthcare practitioner, Dr. A. John Blair, a practitioner; Marianna Bledsoe, the National Institutes for Health; Joyce DuBow, AARP; Justine Handelman, Blue Cross Blue Shield; John Houston, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center; Terri Shaw, Children’s Partnership; and Paul Uhrig, SureScripts. Jodi Daniel and Sarah Wattenberg will represent the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT on the workgroup.

"ONC names privacy, security workgroup members," Government Health IT (December 8, 2009).

HIT Policy Committee Reveals "Meaningful Use" Proposal

Via Healthcare-Informatics:

By 2011, at least 10 percent of all orders processed in a hospital must be entered through CPOE to qualify that institution for CMS incentives under the HITECH Act, according to a proposed matrix of meaningful use released today by ONC’s HIT Policy Committee.

Other 2011 hospital requirement are:

  • implementation of drug-drug, drug-allergy, and drug-formulary checks
  • maintenance of up-to-date problem lists of current and active diagnoses based on ICD-9 or SNOMED
  • incorporation of lab-test results into EHR as structured data
  • reporting of hospital quality measures to CMS
  • implementation of one clinical decision rule related to a high-priority hospital condition
  • providing of patients with an e-copy of their health information
  • capability to exchange key clinical information (eg. discharge summary, procedures, problem lists, medication lists, allergies, test results) among providers of care

In another major development, the committee recommended that incentives be paid according to an ‘adoption year’ timeframe rather than a calendar year timeframe. “Under this scenario, qualifying for the first-year incentive payment would be assessed using the 2011 Measures. The payment rate and phaseout of payments would follow the calendar dates in the statute, but qualifying for incentives would use the ‘adoption-year’ approach,” the committee stated.

Here is the link to the matrix.

Stay tuned for more on meaningful use definition.

HIT Policy Committee workgroup presents preliminary definition for Meaningful Use

On June 16, 2009, the Workgroup on Meaningful Use presented its findings to the HIT Policy Committee.  The findings include two parts:  the preamble and the matrix.   The matrix consists of goals to be achieved by 2011, 2013, and 2015, and the metrics for such goals to evaluate hospital and clinician progress in meeting them.

We will have much more analysis on this preliminary definition later, so stay tuned for our updates.  Meanwhile, our favorite "geek doctor" John Halamka stated the following on his blog:

Now that the initial definition of meaningful use is available, the HIT Standards Committee workgroups and HITSP will work through the month of July to ensure the matrix is populated with the most up to date standards and implementation guide detail.

Hospitals and Clinician offices now know what is expected for 2011, so the time is now to begin your software implementations.


"Meaningful Use has Arrived", Life as a Healthcare CIO (June 16, 2009).