Title: How We Got There'
1How We Got There.
- POLICY 1980-2000
- Don E. Detmer
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3Policy Perspective of Period 1980-1990s
- American Medicine is the best in the world by
far. - Potomac Elsewhere in USA
- Happy Stupid
- View of Informatics Enthusiasts
- Computers improve medical care research.
- View of Medical Establishment
- Modern medicine is wonderful
- Our clinicians are the best in the world.
- Quality measurement was in its infancy.
4AAMC Study 1986
- Medical Education in the Information Age Proc.
Symposium on Medical Informatics. Washington, DC - Take home message
- Informatics is good good for you.
5Institute of Medicine-1986 - 1991
- NIH / IOM June 86 Program Development Workshop
Recommends Study - Queta Bond, then Exec. Dir., IOM, seeks funds
- First internally funded IOM policy study
- IOM Committee formed in 1989
- Improving the Medical (Patient) Record in
Response to Increasing Functional Requirements
and Technological Advances
6Heavy ACMI Representation
- CPR Committee Members
- Marion Ball Octo Barnett Don Berwick Morris
Colleen Nick Davies Don Detmer (C) Ruth Garry
Tom Morris John Norris Ted Shortliffe Henry
Krakauer Don Lindberg, plus many, many more
involved - Subcommittees
- Users and Uses (Berwick Margolis)
- Technical Requirements (Collen Ball)
- Policy Implementation (Shortliffe Tang)
- Staff
- Richard Dick, Elaine Steen, Kathy Lohr et al
7An Essential Technology for Health Care
1st edition 1987-1991 2nd edition 1997
8The Computer-based Patient Record An Essential
Technology for Health Care
- The 1991 1997 Reports
- (Tang / Hammond / van Bemmel / van Ginneken / van
der Lei) - A newly conceived record, not a digital version
of traditional medical record - Computer-based -- Put the focus on the record,
not the computer - Data entry by relevant responsible person
9Twelve Attributes of the Computer-based Patient
Record
- The CPR has a problem list with status of each
problem - The CPR encourages health status functional
level measurement to promote outcomes assessment - The CPR documents clinical rationale
10Twelve Attributes of the Computer-based Patient
Record
- The CPR can link to other clinical records over
time - The CPR system protects confidentiality
comprehensively - The CPR is accessible on a timely basis to
authorized individuals
11Twelve Attributes of the Computer-based Patient
Record
- The CPR system allows selective retrieval and
formatting - The CPR system links to local remote knowledge,
literature, data-bases, systems to aid decision
making - The CPR assists guides clinical problem solving
12Twelve Attributes of the Computer-based Patient
Record
- The CPR supports data collection storage with a
defined vocabulary - The CPR helps manage quality cost of care
- The CPR is flexible expandable to meet needs
over time
13The Computer-based Patient Record An Essential
Technology For Health Care
- Rec. 1 CPRs become the standard for medical ---
all other records relating to patient care. - Rec. 2 CPR Institute
- Rec. 3 R D Support Public Private
- Rec. 4 Standards
- Rec. 5 Model Legislation
- Rec. 6 Shared Costs
- Rec. 7 Informatics Education
14The Economist Magazine 1997
- The CPR Report of the Institute of Medicine
changed the electronic medical record from the
realm of off-beat visionaries to an
establishment-endorsed probability.
15The Computer-based Patient Record An Essential
Technology For Health Care
- Set goal of 10 years for widespread
implementation, e.g., 2001 - CPR Institute founded
- Security Guidelines, etc.
- Nicholas Davies Awards
16Other Relevant IOM / NRC Studies
- The Computer-based Patient Record 1991 1997
- Health Data in the Information Age 1994
- Telemedicine 1995
- For the Record 1997
- Trust in Cyberspace 1999
- Networking Health 2000
- Key Capabilities of an Electronic Health
- Record System 2003
- Patient Safety Achieving a New Standard
- for Care 2004
17IOM / NAS Reports 1991-2000
18AMIA NHI Strategy Policy 97
- Universal Access to Web Health Resources
- Telemedicine Tele-education
- CHRs
- Hospital Primary Care
- Personal Health Records
- Population Health Records
- Decision Support Systems
- Standards Development
- Confidentiality Security
- Research, Education, Development
- International Collaboration
19Notable Federal Activity 90s
- Health Insurance Portability Accountability Act
of 1997 - Administrative Simplification for Standards incl.
Privacy Security - VA DOD develop system-wide CPRs using IOM
Report as future planning template - NCVHS reorganizes as the Governments Health
Information Policy Advisory Committee - NHII Working Group formed
20 PERSONAL Record Consumer e-health records
Infostructure Knowledge IT
First-class Health Care
PATIENT Record Clinic Hospital Records
PUBLIC HEALTH/ POPULATION Record Community
Records Data Banks Repositories
Interlocking computer-based health records
(C3PRs) supported by knowledge IT
infrastructure The EHR
21And, so ends the Second Millennium.
- Pushing Policy for Health IT
- End of Part I
- (Simborg Detmer)
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