Title: Governance Workgroup
1HIT Policy Committee
- Governance Workgroup
- Recommendations on Scope of Nationwide Health
Information Network Governance Functions - John Lumpkin, MD, MPH, Chair
- Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
- October 20, 2010
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2Workgroup Members
Chair John Lumpkin, Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation
- Members
- Laura Adams Rhode Island Quality Institute
- Christine Bechtel National Partnership for Women
Families - Neil Calman Institute for Family Health
- Carol Diamond Markle Foundation
- Linda Fischetti Department of Veterans Affairs
- John Glaser Siemens
- Leslie Harris Center for Democracy Technology
- John Houston University of Pittsburgh NCVHS
- Michael Matthews MedVA
- John Mattison Kaiser Permanente
- Girish Kumar Navani eClinicalWorks
- Tim OReilly OReilly Media
- Wes Rishel Gartner
3Discussion Topics
- Workgroup charge
- Framing for nationwide health information network
governance - Findings from hearing and analysis
- Preliminary recommendations
4Why Address Governance Now?
- HITECH requires it.
- Governance is essential to make decisions needed
to accomplish national HIT agenda and HITECH
goals. - Necessary for the existing limited production
exchange (Exchange) to expand and grow beyond
those entities under federal contract, grant or
cooperative agreement. - Necessary in order to validate and assure that
conditions for trust and nationwide
interoperability exist. - States are establishing governance roles (e.g.
for certification of HISPs) in the absence of
national governance. - Necessary for transparent oversight, enforcement
and accountability.
5Governance Workgroup Charge
- CHARGE To draft a set of recommendations on the
scope and process of governance for nationwide
health information network, including measures
to assure accountability and oversight. - Must engender trust in the nationwide health
information network (NW-HIN) and - Promote and facilitate broader participation in
nationwide health information network exchange
(exchange). - Key Questions
- What needs to be governed in a centralized
fashion? - When should there be coordination by the federal
government (e.g. across governance roles, for
certain functions, services, etc.)? - The nationwide health information network is in
the process of being renamed.
6Workgroup Focus
Priority Focus Not a Priority Focus
Determining the processes and structures to ensure trusted health information exchange Determining the specific standards, services or policies
Examining aspects of governance within ONCs authority or control (e.g. establishing a preferred option for HIE) Examining aspects of governance outside of ONCs authority or control, unless a critical dependency
Identifying any mandatory and optional requirements for the preferred approach for health information exchange Mandating requirements for those who do not elect to participate in the preferred approach for HIE
7Governance Workgroup Timeline
Small group evaluates options regarding how and
who should govern
9/28 10/5 10/12 10/18 10/25 11/1 11/8 11/15
10/20Present prelim recs to HITPC (what)
9/28 Governance Hearing
11/12 WG - finalize recs
11/19 - Present final recs (how and who) to
HITPC
11/5 - WG - discuss draft recs
Preliminary Recommendations regarding what
governance should cover Recommendations
regarding how and who should govern
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8Nationwide Health Information Network (NW-HIN)
Current Definition
- Standards, services and policies for promoting
and facilitating secure exchange of health
information on the internet to improve health and
health care - Not a centralized database or single physical
network. - Is being put forward potentially as a preferred
option for trusted and interoperable exchange of
health information, where various levers could be
employed to encourage its use. - Entities that wish to exchange information
through the NW-HIN would need to demonstrate
compliance with a set of requirements as a
pre-condition to using the NW-HIN. - Includes a set of core functionality for data
transmission, registries and privacy and
security. - Not inclusive of all health information exchange
(HIE).
9Workgroup Guidance
- Recognize and leverage existing governance
mechanisms where feasible for the NW-HIN. - Identify and bridge gaps in existing governance
mechanisms for the NW-HIN. - Identify those aspects of NW-HIN governance
(existing and new) where national-level
coordination could enhance and/or promote greater
trust and interoperability, and suggest
approaches for appropriate coordination. - Assure maximum flexibility for evolution and
innovation avoid rigid rulemaking. - Address barriers and promote exchange of health
information through the NW-HIN
10FINDINGS
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11Governance Hearing Key Themes
- Consumer privacy protections are inherent
components of governance. - The federal government plays an important role in
overall coordination. - Governance should be parsimonious and adaptable
to future, unknown needs. - There is a need for harmonization of policies to
enable exchange of health information. - Common standards are needed to ensure
interoperability and establish trust and security
of the information. - Validation mechanisms are needed to ensure
adherence/compliance with established standards. - Compliance and enforcement mechanisms are
essential components of a governance framework.
12NW-HIN Overarching Governance Objectives
- Improve health while establishing trust
- Assure interoperability while protecting
innovation
13Governance Gap Analysis Findings
- Governance in health information technology is
widely distributed, including policy development
and the formulation of trust frameworks. - Enforcement regimes and accountability mechanisms
are also distributed but are sometimes lacking. - In the Federal HIT space, various agencies
jurisdiction, appear to overlap, potentially
creating confusion and reducing effectiveness. - ONC is a critical intermediary given its
Congressional mandate to coordinate policy making
and standards setting for health information
technology. - Private-sector participation in policy making
takes place through consultations, Federal
Advisory Committee, Congressional hearings and
communications efforts. - It is unclear whether there are other sufficient
institutionalized ways for broader scale and
meaningful public engagement, especially by
consumers.
14RECOMMENDATIONS
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15Nine Sound Principles for NW-HIN Governance
- Transparency and openness
- Inclusive participation and adequate
representation - Effectiveness and efficiency
- Accountability
- Federated governance and devolution
- Clarity of mission and consistency of actions
- Fairness and due process
- Promote and support innovation
- Evaluation, learning and continuous improvement
16General Recommendation
- ONC should establish a national framework for
governance of the NW-HIN that reflects
governance of governances based upon the nine
sound governance principles. - Governance of the NW-HIN should include a core
set of functions, with national-level
coordination and oversight across those
functions. - Governance of the NW-HIN should include
opportunities for broad stakeholder input,
including consumers, on the strategic direction
for the NW-HIN.
17Four Core NW-HIN Governance Functions
- The recommended core functions identify the types
of governance decisions that need to be addressed
for the NW-HIN - Establish policies for privacy, security,
interoperability and to promote adoption of the
NW-HIN. - Establish technical requirements to assure policy
and technical interoperability. - Establish appropriate mechanisms to assure
compliance, accountability and enforcement - Provide oversight of the governance mechanisms
181. Establish policies and practices for NW-HIN
- There should be a uniform set of NW-HIN policies
and practices that are followed as a condition of
exchanging health information through the NW-HIN
and that should be reflected in technical design. - Privacy, security, interoperability, eligibility
criteria, compliance expectations and
jurisdiction. - There should be mechanisms to
- Address gaps in policies and practices
- Coordinate to assure policies and technical
requirements are consistent. - Necessary to assure that sufficient privacy
protections and safeguards are in place to
facilitate and promote nationwide exchange,
interoperability and to remove barriers to
nationwide exchange of health information
192. Establish technical requirements
- Adopt technical requirements for the NW-HIN
through a recognized process that coordinates and
harmonizes standards and that provides for
stakeholder input, including consumers. - There should be mechanisms to address
- Transition processes as technical requirements
change. - Authorization of technical resources for use in
NW-HIN (e.g. provider directories, certificate
authority, registries.) - Necessary to assure that technical requirements
are established to accomplish interoperability
and policy objectives for trust, including a
defined security level of assurance.
203. Compliance, accountability and enforcement
- Assure that eligibility criteria are satisfied
and that compliance with conditions for trust and
interoperability are met, as well as clear
accountability and appropriate enforcement. - Establish and conduct validation to determine
eligibility and verify compliance with policy and
technical requirements as a condition of
exchanging information through the NW-HIN. - Determine consequences of non-compliance with
policies, practices and technical requirements. - Provide a mechanism to address disputes, concerns
or complaints, taking into account measures
provided for under existing law. - Determine how mechanisms for redress, remedies
and sanctions would be applied. - Consider need for coordinated investigation,
enforcement and breach notification.
214. Oversight of the Governance Mechanisms
- Oversight is necessary to assure governance
objectives are met and are effective and able to
adapt over time. - Track or measure certain issues or activities in
support of overseeing the effectiveness and
efficiency of NW-HIN governance. - Oversee ongoing compliance.
- Conduct ongoing assessments of risks and benefits
for the NW-HIN governance, including prevention
of harm. - Periodically evaluate the performance of the
overall governance mechanisms and incorporate the
findings into continuous improvement. - Resolve disputes regarding decision rights among
federated governance functions.
22Next Steps
- Consider input from HIT Policy Committee
regarding preliminary scope recommendations. - Beginning work to explore who would govern and
how the governance functions would be addressed. - Based upon principles of devolution and
representation, are there currently entities or
processes governing the identified function? - Are the goals of NW-HIN governance being met?
- Do the mechanisms operate within the sound
principles for NW-HIN governance? - Are the mechanisms scalable for the NW-HIN?
- Is this a role ONC should play or is it best
delegated? If best delegated, then to whom and
under what structure?
23Discussion
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