Blumenthal to leave ONC this spring

Dr. David Blumenthal, the head of the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC), announced yesterday in a letter to his staff that he's leaving the ONC and returning to his position at Harvard University.  

According to Dr. Blumenthal, the move was "planned" and is expected to take place this spring. Here is a copy of his letter, via Healthcare IT News:

ONC Staff:

As you know, I have told Secretary Sebelius that I will be returning to my academic home this spring, as was planned when I accepted the position of National Coordinator for Health Information Technology. While we still have important work to do together, including the assurance of a productive transition for ONC, now is the time for me to express my deep gratitude to all of my ONC colleagues, and my admiration for all you have accomplished.

We have been privileged to be at the center of a great new enterprise at an historic moment in our health care system. For years America’s health policy leaders have understood that information technology offered the opportunity for transformational improvement of the Nation’s health care system and the health of individual Americans. Yet the obstacles are formidable: our fractured health care system, our dysfunctional payment methods, the lack of an infrastructure for exchanging health information, and more.

 

 The enactment of the Health Information Technology Economic and Clinical Health Act of 2009 handed us a rare opportunity to transcend these obstacles and to create a foundation, a strategy, and a self-sustaining movement toward a future of HIT-assisted health care. I believe we have effectively seized that opportunity, and you deserve the credit for this achievement.

Much attention has gone to the unprecedented resource commitment made by Congress and the President in HITECH – the allocation of as much as $27 billion in incentive payments to help support adoption of EHRs. The money is indeed crucial, and the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services is doing a great job of putting it to use.

But I believe the key factor for success has been, and will continue to be, the concept of “meaningful use.” The HITECH Act recognized that EHR adoption alone would not bring about the transformative improvements that are possible with health information technology. EHRs must be used to support a new kind of information-rich health care. Meaningful use provides, for the first time ever, a consensus goal on how information should be used to enhance care. To realize its promise also requires changes in the processes of care delivery. HITECH gave ONC a major role in assisting health professionals and institutions to make these critical changes in the way care is delivered and we have begun this work in earnest.

We have successfully put in place the $2 billion support system created by HITECH, including:

  • Sixty-two Regional Extension Centers (REC), providing assistance to providers nationwide, with special attention to smaller primary care practices and rural hospitals.
  • Eight-four community college programs to provide HIT training and build a vitally-needed HIT workforce, including training for nurses, physician assistants and other in-place health care workers.
  • Seventeen Beacon communities, demonstrating how HIT can help bring community resources together to tackle specific local health needs.
  • State grants to support local solutions for health information exchange, consonant with broader national standards.
  • A program of research and development to help us continually improve EHRs and move quickly to the next level in HIT.

It is the efforts of the ONC staff, working cooperatively with the health care professions, the states, and so many others that have brought these programs quickly into being. They are now up and running. And we are already seeing results that indicate that the national shift to EHRs and HIT-assisted care is finally underway:

  • Adoption itself has turned up: from 2008 to 2010, the proportion of primary care physicians who had adopted a basic EHR increase by half, from 19.6 percent to 29.6 percent.
  • A significant proportion of providers were already indicating in the latter part of 2010 that they plan to achieve meaningful use objectives and qualify for incentive payments: 81 percent of hospitals, and 41 percent of office-based physicians.
  • A total of 291 EHR products have already been certified to support meaningful use objectives and qualify for use under the incentive payments program.
  • Some 38,000 providers have enrolled in REC assistance programs.
  • Community college programs will “graduate” an initial class of 3,400 HIT-trained students this spring, working toward a total capacity of 10,500 in each six-month session.

We have achieved these accomplishments together, as a hard-working team with a unique opportunity to make a difference.


On a personal note, I have profoundly enjoyed getting to know you and work with you. It has been one of the highlights of my professional life. And I am confident that the progress will continue and even accelerate after I have settled back into academic life in Boston.

Best wishes to you all.

David

 

Pritts named first ONC Chief Privacy Officer

Joy Pritts, a researcher and faculty member at Georgetown University's Health Policy Institute, was named as the first Chief Privacy Officer for the Office of National Coordinator for Health IT.  This position was created pursuant to a provision in ARRA, last year's economic stimulus legislation.

In her new position, Ms. Pritts will advise Dr. Blumenthal on forming policies on privacy, security and data stewardship of electronic health information, as well as coordinate similar efforts on state, federal and international levels.

Ms. Pritts is a graduate of Oberlin College and Case Western Reserve University School of Law.  She has testified before Congress on data privacy issues, and served as a member of Technical Advisory Panel for the multi-state Health Information Security and Privacy Collaborative (HISPC) and on the board of the National Governors Association’s State Alliance for e-Health.

According to Government Health IT:

Blumenthal said Pritts, who started her job Feb. 16, has extensive experience on all the issues that ONC grapples with. For instance, she was heavily consulted by members of Congress in legislating the HITECH health IT incentive law.

'So she has an understanding of the legislative process and a policy understanding, in addition to having worked for the government previously,' Blumenthal said in answer to a reporter’s question after a meeting of HHS’s Health IT Policy Committee.

'She has a combination of an understanding of government, understanding of the issues, and her legal background is very important – her research and policy qualifications,' he added.

"HHS appoints Joy Pritts chief privacy officer," Government Health IT (February 17, 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).

Regional Extension Program: Important Updates and Links from HHS

Via HHS e-mail update:

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) is pleased to announce the availability of materials that are of immediate interest and use to stakeholders and potential applicants for the Health Information Technology Extension Program: Regional Centers Cooperative Agreement Program, and that are new or updated since the August 27, 2009 technical assistance telephone and web conference.

REVISED – Preliminary Application Template (Attachment I to the Funding Opportunity Announcement):  As discussed on the August 27th technical assistance public conference, the suggested template for applicants’ use in compiling and presenting the information required for the Preliminary Application has been updated to include the complete requirements established in the funding opportunity announcement and is now available from www.grants.gov and the Extension Program section of ONC’s website at http://healthit.hhs.gov/extensionprogram.

NEW – A complete transcript of the August 27th technical assistance conference is available for download from the Extension Program section of ONC’s website.  Please visit http://healthit.hhs.gov/extensionprogram to access detailed information about the conference, including the transcript and the presentation slides used during the call.

NEW/REVISED – Program-specific Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) are now available on the Extension Program section of ONC’s website.  New FAQs are posted frequently, so potential applicants and other interested parties are encouraged to visit often.  Please visit http://healthit.hhs.gov/extensionprogram then scroll down and click on “Frequently Asked Questions”.

On the HIT Extension Program site, you can find the Funding Opportunity Announcement / Application Instructions document,  as well as a large FAQ section and the "Facts-At-A-Glance" summary. 

You can find the August 27th, 2009 presentation (PPT) here, and the transcript of that same presentation here.

"Health Information Technology Extension Program: Regional Centers Cooperative Agreement Program Update," HHS e-mail update (September 3, 2009).