About Mike Squires

Mike Squires is a marketing and sales executive with 12 years focused on e-Healthcare initiatives that helped physicians change the way they work for better patient care. Experienced in introducing new online products to physicians, healthcare professionals, and the pharmaceutical and medical device industries with innovative sales and marketing strategies at start-up and traditional healthcare publishers. Helped position Medscape as the market leader to the industry and accelerate e-product offerings of Elsevier’s International Medical News Group and F-D-C Reports. Directed marketing, sales, client relations, sales support, and implementation of medical education and promotion programs. Entrepreneurial and enthusiastic; excellent mentor and motivator.

Blumenthal Letter #8: Standards and Certification Criteria to Support Meaningful Use of Electronic Health Records

Dr. David Blumenthal

Emailed December 30, 2009

A Message from Dr. David Blumenthal, National Coordinator for Health Information Technology

As we look toward 2010, we can envision a transformation of our health system to improve health care quality, efficiency, equity, and safety through the use of health information technology (HIT), while providing the foundation for continued, measurable improvement in our nation’s health.  The adoption and meaningful use of information technology in health care is central to a necessary and overdue modernization of our health system. 

As required by the HITECH Act, the Secretary of the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) has published an initial set of standards, implementation specifications, and certification criteria to enhance the interoperability, functionality, utility, and security of health information technology.  These criteria are outlined in the interim final rule (IFR) on Standards & Certification Criteria issued today by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC).  

The IFR provides details on requirements for “certified” electronic health record (EHR) systems, and the technical specifications needed to support secure, interoperable, nationwide electronic exchange and meaningful use of health information. 

In a related announcement, the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) issued a notice of proposed rulemaking (NPRM) that outlines provisions governing the Medicare and Medicaid EHR incentive programs, including a proposed definition for the central concept of “meaningful use” of EHR technology.  In order for professionals and hospitals to be eligible to receive payments under the incentive programs, provided through the Recovery Act, they must be able to demonstrate meaningful use of a certified EHR system.  The proposed standards and certification criteria in the IFR are fundamentally linked to and specifically designed to support the 2011 meaningful use criteria.

Great care was taken in the development of these criteria, with input from the public and federal advisory committees every step of the way.  The resulting standards and certification criteria in the IFR are organized into four categories as recommended by the HIT Policy Committee and HIT Standards Committee:

  • Content Exchange Standards (i.e., standards used to share clinical information such as clinical summaries, prescriptions, and structured electronic documents);
  • Vocabulary Standards (i.e., standard nomenclature used to describe clinical problems and procedures, medications, and allergies);
  • Transport Standards (i.e., standards used to establish the communication protocol between systems); and
  • Privacy and Security Standards (e.g., authentication, access control, transmission security/encryption) which relate to and span across all of the other types of standards.

While well-defined data and technical standards are the foundation for interoperability between systems – allowing for reliable, consistent, secure, and accurate information exchange – we recognize that a high-level of nationwide interoperability will take time and will occur at varying rates.  Therefore, our approach to the adoption of standards and certification criteria is pragmatic, yet forward looking.  The criteria are designed to be supportive of the staged meaningful use requirements, but at the same time lay the foundation for future growth in information exchange and technological innovation.

An incremental approach to standards adoption requires harmonization with current and future standards to come.  We will continue to be guided by recommendations from our federal advisory committees, public comment, industry readiness, and future meaningful use goals and objectives established for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR incentive programs.  We anticipate this ongoing evolution in standards and certification criteria development as meaningful use requirements become more demanding over time and as industry continues to spur adoption through its innovative offerings.

Now, we ask for your continued input to inform the final regulations due in 2010.

Additional information on both of these regulations and how you can contribute to the open public comment periods can be found through the HHS news release issued today and at the http://HealthIT.HHS.Gov website.

At ONC, we look forward to your continued and active participation in HITECH programming and ongoing rulemaking processes in the new year.

Sincerely,
David Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.P.
National Coordinator for Health Information Technology
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) encourages you to share this information as we work together to enhance the quality, safety and value of care and the health of all Americans through the use of electronic health records and health information technology.

For more information and to receive regular updates from the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, please subscribe to our Health IT News list.

END OF eMAIL UPDATE

CMS & ONC Issue Meaningful Use Definition and EHR Standards for Incentives

CMS and ONC Issue Regulations Proposing a Definition of ‘Meaningful Use’ and Setting Standards for Electronic Health Record Incentive Program
Press Release Distributed via eMail
DATE: Wednesday, December 30, 2009 
FOR RELEASE: Immediately                 

Public Encouraged to Comment on New Regulations:
60-Day Comment Period

“The Centers for Medicare & Medicare Services (CMS) and the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) encourage public comment on two regulations issued today that lay a foundation for improving quality, efficiency and safety through meaningful use of certified electronic health record (EHR) technology. The regulations will help implement the EHR incentive programs enacted under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Recovery Act).

“A proposed rule issued by CMS outlines proposed provisions governing the EHR incentive programs, including defining the central concept of ‘meaningful use’ of EHR technology. An interim final regulation (IFR) issued by ONC sets initial standards, implementation specifications, and certification criteria for EHR technology.  Both regulations are open to public comment.

“‘Widespread adoption of electronic health records holds great promise for improving health care quality, efficiency, and patient safety,’ said, National Coordinator for Health Information Technology David Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.P.  ‘The Recovery Act’s financial incentives demonstrate Congress’ and the Administration’s commitment to help providers adopt and make meaningful use of EHR technology so they can give better care and their patients’ experience of care will improve. Over time, we believe the EHR incentive program under Medicare and Medicaid will accelerate and facilitate health information technology adoption by more individual providers and organizations throughout the health care system.’

“‘These regulations are closely linked,’ said Charlene Frizzera, CMS acting administrator.  ‘CMS’s proposed regulation would define and specify how to demonstrate ‘meaningful use’ of EHR technology, which is a prerequisite for receiving the Medicare incentive payments.  Our rule also outlines the proposed payment methodologies for the Medicare and Medicaid EHR incentive programs.  ONC’s regulation sets forth the standards and specifications that will enhance the interoperability, functionality, utility and security of health information technology.’

“CMS and ONC worked closely to develop the two rules and received input from hundreds of technical subject matters experts, health care providers, and other key stakeholders.  Numerous public meetings to solicit public comment were held by three Federal advisory committees: the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS), the Health IT Policy Committee (HITPC), and the Health IT Standards Committee (HITSC).  HITSC presented its final recommendations to the National Coordinator in August 2009.  These recommendations, along with all other input were considered to help inform the development of the regulations announced today.

“The IFR issued by ONC describes the standards that must be met by certified EHR technology to exchange healthcare information among providers and between providers and patients. This initial set of standards begins to define a common language to ensure accurate and secure health information exchange across different EHR systems.  The IFR describes standard formats for clinical summaries and prescriptions; standard terms to describe clinical problems, procedures, laboratory tests, medications and allergies; and standards for the secure transportation of this information using the Internet.

“The IFR calls for the industry to standardize the way in which EHR information is exchanged between organizations, and sets forth criteria required for an EHR technology to be certified. These standards will support meaningful use and data exchange among providers who must use certified EHR technology to qualify for the Medicare and Medicaid incentives.

“Under the statute, HHS is required to adopt an initial set of standards for EHR technology by Dec. 31, 2009.  The IFR will go into effect 30 days after publication, with an opportunity for public comment and refinement over the next 60 days.  A final rule will be issued in 2010.

“‘We strongly encourage stakeholders to provide comments on these standards and specifications,’ Dr. Blumenthal said.

“The Recovery Act established programs to provide incentive payments to eligible professionals and eligible hospitals participating in Medicare and Medicaid that adopt and make “meaningful use” of certified EHR technology.  Incentive payments may begin as soon as October 2010 to eligible hospitals.  Incentive payments to other eligible providers may begin in January 2011.

“The proposed rule would define the term ‘meaningful EHR user’ as an eligible professional or eligible hospital that, during the specified reporting period, demonstrates meaningful use of certified EHR technology in a form and manner consistent with certain objectives and measures presented in the regulation.  These objectives and measures would include use of certified EHR technology in a manner that improves quality, safety, and efficiency of health care delivery, reduces health care disparities, engages patients and families, improves care coordination, improves population and public health, and ensures adequate privacy and security protections for personal health information. 

“The proposed rule would define meaningful use for the Medicare EHR incentive programs.  It proposes one definition that would apply to eligible professionals participating in the Medicare fee-for-service and the Medicare Advantage EHR incentive programs as well as a proposed definition that would apply to eligible hospitals and critical access hospitals.  These definitions also would serve as the minimum standard for eligible professionals and eligible hospitals participating in the Medicaid EHR incentive program.  The rule proposes that states could request CMS approval to implement additional meaningful use measures, as appropriate, but could not request approval of fewer or less rigorous meaningful use measures than required by the rule.

“This rule proposes a phased approach to implement the proposed requirements for demonstrating meaningful use.  This approach would initially establish reasonable criteria for meaningful use based on currently available technological capabilities and providers’ practice experience.  CMS will establish stricter and more extensive criteria for demonstrating meaningful use over time, as anticipated developments in technology and providers’ capabilities occur.

“CMS provides a 60-day comment period on the proposed rule.  ‘The definition and requirements for demonstrating meaningful use of EHR technology are proposals. CMS welcomes and will give serious consideration to comments that improve our proposal while achieving the goals Congress established for the EHR incentive programs,’ Frizzera said.

“The CMS proposed rule and fact sheets, may be viewed at http://www.cms.hhs.gov/Recovery/11_HealthIT.asp

“ONC’s interim final rule may be viewed at http://healthit.hhs.gov/standardsandcertification. In early 2010 ONC intends to issue a notice of proposed rulemaking related to the certification of health information technology.”
# # #

Additional excerpts from ONC and CMS Web sites:
CMS Proposed Rule: Medicare and Medicaid Programs; Electronic Health Record Incentive Program (pdf) 

ONC Interim Final Rule: Health Information Technology: Initial Set of Standards, Implementation Specifications, and Certification Criteria for Electronic Health Record Technology (pdf)

Facts At A Glance: Health Information Technology: Initial Set of Standards, Implementation Specifications, and Certification Criteria for Electronic Health Record Technology

Standards & Certification Interim Final Rule: 
Frequently Asked Questions
Please note:
Questions are organized by category. These pages are updated frequently, so please check back with the ONC site often.

Question Categories:
A. Background/General
B. Timeframe & Comments
C. Standards & Certification Criteria
D. Related Rules

Related CMS Links
Press Release: CMS and ONC Issue Regulations Proposing A Definition Of “Meaningful Use” and Setting Standards for Electronic Health Record Incentive Program

Fact Sheet: Proposed Requirements for EHR Medicaid Incentive Program

Fact Sheet: Proposed Requirements for EHR Medicare Incentive Program

Sheet: Proposed Definition of Meaningful Use

Health IT Frequently Asked Questions

Blumenthal’s Updates — Dec 30, 2009
For Nat’l Coordinator for Health IT David Blumenthal’s Letter #8 to Public and Link to his Health IT Buzz post “A Defining Moment for Meaningful Use,” see e-Healthcare Marketing post.

Reporting on Information Releases from ONC and CMS
See HISTalk blog’s Dec 30, 2009 post “ONCHIT Releases Preliminary Definition of Meaningful Use” for summary of proposed and interim rules.
Mary Mosquera’s Dec 30, 2009 story in Government HealthIT, carried my favorite headline “The wait is over: HHS unveil’s ‘meaningful use’ plan” as well as a comprehensive summary while avoiding a detailed rundown.
Healthcare IT News delivered two articles on Dec 30, 2009:
          Bernie Moengain wrote: “CMS, ONC deliver meaningful use package”
          Jack Beaudoin wrote: Eligible Provider “Meaningful Use: Criteria”
Joseph Goedert reported a brief summary Dec 30, 2009 in HealthData Management called “Feds Issue Meaningful Use, Certification Rules.”

Blumenthal Letter #7: Help Wanted: Skilled Health IT Workforce to Modernize Health Care

Blumenthal Letter #7: Help Wanted: 
Skilled Health IT Workforce to Modernize Health Care
 

Dr. David Blumenthal

Emailed December 24, 2009
A Message from Dr. David Blumenthal,
National Coordinator for Health Information Technology
  

As health care providers and hospitals across the nation incorporate electronic health records into routine patient care, the demand for highly skilled health IT professionals will rapidly grow.  We will need a workforce that not only understands the technology and how it functions, but also its implications for patient care and workflow in clinical settings.  When my practice implemented electronic records a decade ago, we were fortunate to have our hospital’s highly skilled IT support staff working shoulder-to-shoulder with us.  These staff got us over the considerable hurdle of learning to use EHRs.  Unfortunately, not every hospital or practice has the benefit of this kind of help, and the necessary personnel are in short supply.  Various studies have shown that we need at least 50,000 additional qualified health IT workers to assist hospitals and physicians as they move to adopt and meaningfully use electronic health records.  Clearly, we must “grow” a corps of talented individuals with different backgrounds to fill a wide range of important roles, to support rising demand sparked by the Medicare and Medicaid incentives authorized by HITECH.  

Last month I announced the availability of $80 million to fund community college training programs and curriculum development to help strengthen the health IT workforce.  These grants were the first in a series of programs, authorized by the HITECH Act, to address the need for the skilled workforce to help providers put in place and maintain secure, interoperable EHR systems.  

The first, the Community College Consortia Program, totaling $70 million, will help create programs of study in health IT that trainees with some background in health care or IT will be able to complete in six months or less.  Graduates will be equipped to work at the frontlines of adoption and meaningful use, helping doctors, nurses, and hospitals set up and use health IT systems in their practices and workplaces.  

The second, the Curriculum Development Centers Program, totaling $10 million, will fund the development of educational materials to support the community college training programs.  The availability of these resources will allow these programs to ramp up quickly so graduates can begin meeting workforce demands.  

Today’s announcement of two new workforce development grant programs includes an additional $38 million to establish a competency testing program and university-based training programs.   

The Competency Examination Program will provide $6 million to an institution of higher education to create an objective mechanism to assess basic competency for individuals completing programs like those developed through the Community College Consortia Program.  
The University-Based Training Program is expected to generate graduates in vital highly specialized health IT roles over the course of three years.  The program will provide $32 million to support academic program development that will lead to a university-issued certificate of advanced training (e.g., post-baccalaureate or graduate certificate) or a master’s degree.  

As these workforce programs are rolled out, you can find grants information and corresponding application deadlines at http://healthit.hhs.gov/portal/server.pt?open=512&objID=1310&mode=2&cached=true.  

Modernizing our health care system requires the mobilization of an educated and talented workforce.  By supporting such training we will accelerate the meaningful use of health IT and create tens of thousands of secure jobs when and where they are desperately needed.  

Sincerely,
David Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.P.
National Coordinator for Health Information Technology
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) encourages you to share this information as we work together to enhance the quality, safety and value of care and the health of all Americans through the use of electronic health records and health information technology.   

For more information and to receive regular updates from the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, please subscribe to our Health IT News list.

The Seven Letters from Dr. Blumenthal to the public on Health IT.

HITECH Funding Opportunities from ONC

HITECH Funding Opportunities from ONC
These are the eight funding programs from the Office of National Coordinator (ONC) for Health IT. Excerpted from ONC Web site on Dec 22, 2009. Links for upcoming technical assistance calls or slides and transcripts where available.

Currently Available Funding Opportunities
Health Information Technology Extension Program (cycle 2)
Objective: This program provides grants for the establishment of Health Information Technology Regional Extension Centers that will offer technical assistance, guidance and information on best practices to support and accelerate health care providers’ efforts to become meaningful users of Electronic Health Records (EHRs).
Application Deadline: 
Cycle 1: Full Applications – November 3, 2009
Cycle 2: Preliminary Applications – December 22, 2009; Full Applications – January 29, 2010 

Curriculum Development Centers
Objective: 
This funding opportunity, one component of the Health IT Workforce Program, will provide $10 million in grants to institutions of higher education (or consortia thereof) to support health information technology (health IT) curriculum development.
Application Deadline:  January 14, 2010 (Letter of Intent due January 4, 2010)
See slides and transcript from Dec 17, 2009 technical assistance call.

Community College Consortia to Educate Health Information Technology Professionals
Objective:
This program, one component of the Health IT Workforce Program, seeks to rapidly create health IT education and training programs at Community Colleges or expand existing programs.  Community Colleges funded under this initiative will establish intensive, non-degree training programs that can be completed in six months or less.
Application Deadline:  January 22, 2010 (Letter of Intent due January 6, 2010)
Slides and Transcript from Technical Assistance Call Dec 16, 2009.

Program of Assistance for University-Based Training
Objective:  The purpose of this program, one component of the Health IT Workforce Program, is to rapidly increase the availability of individuals qualified to serve in specific health information technology professional roles requiring university-level training.  
Application Deadline:  January 25, 2010 (Letter of Intent due January 6, 2010)
Technical Assistance call on Dec 23, 2009 at 2:00 pm and Jan 5, 2009 at 3:00 pm EST plus Slides from Dec 23 call.

Competency Examination for Individuals Completing Non-Degree Training
Objective:
  This funding opportunity, one component of the Health IT Workforce Program, will provide $6 million in grants to an institution of higher education (or consortia thereof) to support the development and initial administration of a set of health IT competency examinations.
Application Deadline:  January 25, 2010 (Letter of Intent due January 8, 2010)
Technical Assistance Call on Jan 6, 2010 at 1:00pm EST. Details to come.

Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects (SHARP) Program
Objective:  The purpose of these awards is to fund research focused on achieving breakthrough advances to address well-documented problems that have impeded adoption: 1) Security of Health Information Technology; 2) Patient-Centered Cognitive Support; 3) Healthcare Application and Network Platform Architectures; and, 4) Secondary Use of EHR Data.
Application Deadline:  January 25, 2010 (Letter of Intent due January 4, 2010)
Technical Assistance Call: Dec 22, 2009, and Jan 4, 2010 at 2:30 pm plus Slides from Dec 22 call.

Beacon Community Cooperative Agreement Program
Objective:
  This program will provide funding to communities to build and strengthen their health information technology (health IT) infrastructure and exchange capabilities to demonstrate the vision of meaningful health IT.
Application Deadline:  February 1, 2010 (Letter of Intent due January 8, 2010)
Slides and Transcript from Technical Assistance Call Dec 14, 2009.
 
Closed Funding Opportunities (Pending Award)
State Health Information Exchange Cooperative Agreement Program
These grant programs will support states and/or State Designated Entities (SDEs) in establishing health information exchange (HIE) capacity among health care providers and hospitals in their jurisdictions. Such efforts at the state level will establish and implement appropriate governance, policies, and network services within the broader national framework to rapidly build capacity for connectivity between and among health care providers. State programs to promote HIE will help to realize the full potential of EHRs to improve the coordination, efficiency, and quality of care.
Awards expected in early 2010.

JAMIA: Characteristics associated with RHIO viability

JAMIA: Characteristics associated with Regional Health Information Organization viability
In January 2010 issue of JAMIA,  the original research paper titled “Characteristics associated with Regional Health Information Organization viability” by Julia Adler-Milstein, John Landefeld, and Ashish K Jha concludes “Our work suggests that RHIOs find a broad group of stakeholders and begin with a narrow set of activities to help them get off the ground. Further, we believe that judicious use of grants, possibly through ‘matching’ mechanisms where stakeholders are also asked to contribute early, will help to ensure that RHIOs become viable and self-sustaining.”

As Joseph Goedert reported Dec 17, 2009 in HealthData Management article titled “What Makes HIEs Viable?” “Results from a national survey of regional health information organizations show simplicity and early funding commitments from participants improve viability of the initiatives.”

A December 2007 study in Health Affairs by two of the same Harvard authors examining “The State Of Regional Health Information Organizations: Current Activities And Financing” found “a substantial number of early failures, stalled efforts, and RHIOs that were heavily dependent on grants.”

Blumental Letter #6: Keeping a SHARP Focus on Innovation

Blumental Letter #6:
Keeping a SHARP Focus on Innovation
 
Plus Health IT Buzz Blog Post

Dr. David Blumenthal

Dr. David Blumenthal

December 18, 2009 (sent as email)
A Message from
Dr. David Blumenthal,
National Coordinator for Health Information Technology 
Today the Obama administration announced the availability of $60 million in Recovery Act funds to support the development of the Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects (SHARP) program. SHARP awards will fund research focused on identifying technology solutions to address well-documented problems impeding broad adoption of health information technology (health IT). By helping to overcome key challenges, the research will also accelerate progress towards achieving nationwide meaningful use of health IT.  

As we continue this unprecedented effort towards meaningful use and seamless, secure information exchange, we also must acknowledge that there remains a gap between the promise of health IT and the realization of its full benefits. To achieve the goal of a transformed health care delivery system, it’s critical that we close this gap by enabling a robust research infrastructure that can focus on areas where “breakthrough” advances are needed to help clear obstacles to adoption. Under the SHARP program, four awardees will receive funding to develop multidisciplinary research projects that will identify such breakthrough solutions.

SHARP program awardees will create research programs that draw from many areas of expertise.  They will focus on issues of central interest to all health IT stakeholders, fostering considerable discussion and debate.  If for example, SHARP research helped identify new methods to create tools that will, through their incorporation into deployed technology, enhance data security, then public trust in the electronic maintenance and exchange of health information would be reinforced and strengthened – which would in turn help encourage broader adoption.

Areas requiring this innovative research approach that will be tackled by the SHARP awardees include the security of health IT, patient-centered cognitive support, application and network platform architectures, and the secondary use of EHR data as a way of measuring and improving quality of care.

Another important aspect of the SHARP program is that the research projects will bring together key stakeholders – researchers, patient groups, health care providers, and others – to work with one another to transform health IT research into applications. This collaborative approach allows us to consider the many voices of health IT stakeholders, and work together towards common goals. With our eyes on the vision of patient-centered, quality health care we can focus research on innovative, pragmatic, and realistic solutions which can then be implemented across the nation.

I truly look forward to seeing the innovative research that emerges from this program. I know that this research will provide critical insights that will bring us closer every day to a better, more efficient health care delivery system, enabled by health IT and empowered by the seamless and secure exchange of electronic health information.

Sincerely,
David Blumenthal, M.D., M.P.P.
National Coordinator for Health Information Technology
U.S. Department of Health & Human Services

The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) encourages you to share this information as we work together to enhance the quality, safety and value of care and the health of all Americans through the use of electronic health records and health information technology.

For more information and to receive regular updates from the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, please subscribe to our Health IT News list.
# # #

In Blumenthal’s Health IT Buzz Blog Post entitled “Innovation in Health IT: A Key Component to Improving Care” on Dec 18, 2009, he writes “Why invest in research for breakthrough advances in health IT, when we have so many communities who are just now laying the groundwork? Simply stated, because it’s important to simultaneously address both the present and the future as we establish a new paradigm for health IT.  ONC envisions a health care system that delivers higher-quality, safer, and more efficient, accessible, equitable, and convenient care enabled by health IT. Research conducted by these projects will accelerate progress towards achieving just that.” 

See the previous post on e-Healthcare Marketing for additional information on SHARP Focus on Innovation.

ONC: Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects (SHARP) Program

Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects (SHARP) Program
ONC has released its third funding program in two days. This program was posted on ONC HITECH Funding pages on Dec 18, 2009.
Objective:  “The purpose of these awards is to fund research focused on achieving breakthrough advances to address well-documented problems that have impeded adoption: 1) Security of Health Information Technology; 2) Patient-Centered Cognitive Support; 3) Healthcare Application and Network Platform Architectures; and, 4) Secondary Use of EHR Data. ”

Application Deadline:  January 25, 2010 (Letter of Intent due January 4, 2010)

Additional info excerpted from ONC HITECH Funding Pages.
Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects (SHARP) Program
“The purpose of the Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects (SHARP) Program is to fund research focused on achieving breakthrough advances to address well-documented problems that have impeded adoption of health IT and to accelerate progress towards achieving nationwide meaningful use of health IT in support of a high-performing, continuously-learning health care system.”

“ONC expects to award four cooperative agreements:

  1. Security of Health Information Technology
  2. Patient-Centered Cognitive Support
  3. Healthcare Application and Network Platform Architectures
  4. Secondary Use of EHR Data”

Learn more about the Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects Program:

ONC will host a technical assistance call to answer questions related to the SHARP Program on December 22, 2009 at 2:30 PM EST.  More details to follow.

For questions relating to the Strategic Health IT Advanced Research Projects Program, email wil.yu@hhs.gov. 

ONC Releases Two More HIT Workforce Training Programs: Dec 17, 2009

ONC Releases Two More HIT Workforce Training Programs: Dec 17, 2009
University-based Training and
Competency Exams for Non-degree Training

Two new workforce training programs were posted on ONC site on Dec 17, 2009, though not yet “officially” announced. National Coordinator for Health IT Dr. David Blumenthal has been dropping hints in the past few days about additional funding programs to be announced shortly. So here are two new programs.

Program of Assistance for University-Based Training
Objective:  The purpose of this program is to rapidly increase the availability of individuals qualified to serve in specific health information technology professional roles requiring university-level training.  
Application Deadline:  January 25, 2010

Competency Examination for Individuals Completing Non-Degree Training
Objective:  This funding opportunity, one component of the workforce program, will provide $6 million in grants to an institution of higher education (or consortia thereof) to support the development and initial administration of a set of health IT competency examinations.
Application Deadline:  January 25, 2010 (Letter of Intent due January 8, 2010)

Additional info excerpted from ONC HITECH Funding pages:
Program of Assistance for University-Based Training
“The purpose of the Information Technology Professionals in Health Care: Program of Assistance for University-Based Training grants is to rapidly increase the availability of individuals qualified to serve in specific health information technology professional roles requiring university-level training.  Four-year colleges or universities are eligible to apply for funding under this program, which will emphasize programs that can be completed by the trainee in one year or less.  Awardees will be expected to promptly establish, fill, and begin graduating students from new training positions as rapidly as is feasible without compromising the adequacy of training such graduates will have received.”

“The six roles targeted by this funding opportunity are:

  1. Clinician/Public Health Leader
  2. Health Information Management and Exchange Specialist
  3. Health Information Privacy and Security Specialist
  4. Research and Development Scientist
  5. Programmers and Software Engineer
  6. Health IT Sub-specialist “

Learn more about the Program of Assistance for University-Based Training:

Competency Examination Program
“The Competency Examination for Individuals Completing Non-Degree Training program, one component of the workforce program, will provide $6 million in grants to an institution of higher education (or consortia thereof) to support the development and initial administration of a set of health IT competency examinations.  The examinations will assess basic competency for individuals trained through short-duration, non-degree health IT programs, and for members of the workforce with relevant experience or other types of training who are seeking to demonstrate their competency in certain health IT workforce roles integral to achieving meaningful use of electronic health information.”

Learn more about the Competency Examination Program:

‘Beacon’ communities must show HIT bona fides

‘Beacon’ communities must show HIT bona fides
Mary Mosquera reported in Government Health IT on Dec 14, 2009,
“To become a ‘beacon’ community, applicants must have an established track record of using health IT to improve health care in at least one category — cost efficiency, quality of care or population health, said Dr. Farzad Mostashari, senior advisor to the Office of the National Coordinator for health IT during a Dec. 14 teleconference.”

Beacon Communities Technical Call Documents from ONC site
Slides
Transcript

For overview of program and links to Announcment and FAQs, see this post on e-Healthcare Marketing.
Dr. Blumenthal’s Update #5 “Beacon Communities: Shining a Light on the Real Impacts of Health IT” is also posted on e-Healthcare Marketing.

NHIN Workgroup Meeting Materials & Webcast: Dec 16, 2009

NHIN Workgroup of HIT Policy Committee
December 16, 2009
 Materials & Webcast
Excerpted from HIT Policy Committee Meetings Page.
Location:
Washington, DC
Time:
10 a.m. to 1 p.m. EST – Public Meeting
Topic for discussion: Directory Services and Certificates

NOTE: The Workgroup will go into CLOSED SESSION at 1:15 p.m. EST
Prior related e-Healthcare Marketing posts: Timed Meeting Agenda, other NHIN info.

How to Participate
:
Public Dial-in Number: 1-877-709-8152
Webconference URL: http://altarum.na3.acrobat.com/HITpolicy

Meeting Materials:
Agenda [PDF - 409 KB]