Transcript Document

Communicating
Health Story
Project Value
A Series of Roundtable Meetings
Focused on Educating our
Membership
Agenda
Overview
1. The historical view
2. The key components of a standard presentation
3. Varying the presentation by audience
4. The basic elements of a Health Story Project elevator
speech
5. Questions and Answer Session
Panelists
Name
Company and Contact Information
Juergen Fritsch
M*Modal, Chief Scientist
[email protected]
Liora Alschuler
Lantana Consulting Group, CEO
[email protected]
Mark L. Morsch
Optum360, VP of Technology, NLP Innovation
[email protected]
Nick Mahurin
InfraWare, CEO
[email protected]
Alex Lippitt
HIMSS, Sr. Director of Interoperability and
Standards
[email protected]
Overview
1. Purposes of Today’s Roundtable
• How to Communicate Health Story Project Value
• How to Represent the Health Story Project to Different
Groups
2. Format
•
Panel presents; questions will be held to the end of
presentations; please put your questions in the WebEx
chat window
3. Follow up
• Resources
• Try It – Be Bold!
1. The historical view: The beginning, the
middle and the end, and where we are
going next
Juergen Fritsch
Clinical Documentation Challenge
Direct Data Entry:
Structured and
encoded information.
• Tedious manual process,
• Time-consuming,
Dictation:
Fast and easy,
expressive.
• Transcription can be expensive
• Subject to longer turn-around times
• Documentation lacks expressiveness
• Clinical data lost, because documents
of natural language
are neither structured nor encoded.
JAMA 2012; 307 (23): 2497-2498
Health Story - Vision
• Comprehensive Electronic Records that Tell a
Patient’s Complete Health Story
• 1.2B narrative clinical documents produced by
US healthcare system annually
• Constitutes 60% of all clinical data
• Narrative documents underutilized in today’s
EHR systems
Health Story - Beginnings
• Health Story started in 2006 as an alliance of
healthcare vendors, providers and associations
• Pooled resources in a rapid development initiative
• Produced Health Level 7 (HL7) data standards for
the flow of information between
• common types of healthcare documents, and
• EHR systems
• Building on HL7 CDA standard
• CDA for Common Document Types (CDA4CDT)
Health Story - Continued
• Joining forces with Integrating the Healthcare
Enterprise USA (IHE) and
• The Office of the National Coordinator’s Standards
and Interoperability Framework
• Harmonized work across organizations to produce
• Consolidated Clinical Document Architecture
standard (C-CDA)
• Now included in Meaningful Use Stage 2
Meaningful Clinical Documents
• Meaningful Clinical Documents are a blend
between free form text and fully structured
documentation, that allow to
– represent the thought process, and
– capture the clinical facts
Consolidated CDA
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CCD
Consultation Note
Diagnostic Imaging Report
Discharge Summary
H&P
Operative Note
Procedure Note
Progress Note
Unstructured Document
Health Story – New Umbrella
• HIMSS takes on management of Health Story
project in January 2013
• Providing global leadership and greater exposure
among healthcare IT community
• Any HIMSS member can opt-in at no charge
• Sponsors can continue to promote and expand the
project
Health Story - Constituency
• Spanning Clinical Documentation Lifecycle:
• Electronic Information Capture
• Dictation/Transcription/Voice Recognition
• Natural Language Processing
• Computer Assisted Coding (CAC)
• Narrative Data Mining & Analytics
• Document Management
Health Story – Mission Moving Forward
• Establish a strong and effective coalition of
members and partners
• Maintain relevance & adoption in nationallyrecognized standards bodies
• Raise awareness and foster adoption of the Health
Story approach to improve information exchange
in three areas:
• Coordinated patient care
• Payer-provided integration
• Population health
2. The key components of a standard
presentation, the key messages
Liora Alschuler
Key Points
• Problem Statement
• The migration from paper to electronic
records has to work for everyone
• Today, clearly not the case
• Response
• Standards that integrate narrative,
coded elements
• Align policy with standards, technology
Interoperability for Everyone
“It was so much easier
when I could just say what
I wanted.”
John Spinosa, MD, quoting a colleague
Challenge
JAMA, Internal Medicine, published online, May 27, 2013
“I have never seen…a checkbox for apprehension…”
“The medical record is not data. It contains data… but it
is not data, nor is it simply a repository into which data
are poured.”
And who does it serve? Clinician & patient or…
“... a small army of people who “need” to know
what happened in the examination room or at the
bedside…”
Challenge
JAMIA, published online, January 12, 2011
Structured data capture can be at odds with the
expressivity, workflow, and usability factors
preferred by clinicians.
Authors recommend choice in data capture and
text processing modalities.
Key Points: Response
• We can create an electronic record that ensures value for
– Care delivery
– Evidence-based medicine
– And which endures over time, as technology evolves
• Vision
– Comprehensive electronic records that
– Tell a patient’s complete health story.
How?
• Use simple, stable, established formats for
information exchange.
• Mix data and narrative.
• Go Big
• This will be:
– Less disruptive
– More useful
Investing in Information
• CDA can be simple
• CDA can be complex
• Simple encoding relatively inexpensive, complex encoding
costs more
• Gall's Law is a rule of thumb from John Gall's Systemantics:
How Systems Really Work and How They Fail:
– A complex system that works is invariably found to have
evolved from a simple system that worked.
– The inverse proposition also appears to be true: A
complex system designed from scratch never works and
cannot be made to work. You have to start over, beginning
with a working simple system.
CDA Basics
• A Header + Body
• CDA Header: metadata
• CDA Body
• narrative (free-text) form required and
• coded (computable) form optional
Incremental Approach
1.
2.
Get the data flowing, get the data flowing, get the data flowing.
Incrementally add structure, where cost effective to do so. Quality
Reporting
Decision
Support
Clinical
Applications
Meaningful
Use!
Coded Discrete
Data Elements
HL7 CDA Structured
Documents
SNOMED CT
Disease, DF-00000
Metabolic Disease, D6-00000
Narrative
Text
Disorder of carbohydrate metabolism, D6-50000
Disorder of glucose metabolism, D6-50100
Diabetes Mellitus, DB-61000
Type 1, DB61010
Neonatal, DB75110
Carpenter Syndrome, DB-02324
Insulin dependant type IA, DB-61020
We are looking for a shift in policy
• Lower the threshold for information exchange so that
– all may participate
– approach 100% of the records for 100% of patients
• Incentivize participation at all levels of interoperability
• Recognize diversity of applications
• Respect the clinical voice
• Provide value back to those who incur the costs
Value Statement
• A health record is the patient’s “health story”
• The primary purpose of the record is to support care delivery
• Electronic records must produce a longitudinal record of lasting
value: expressive, data conversion-proof
• Clinical records must be complete, well organized, easy to navigate,
concise, logical, adaptable to the needs of the user, sharable, and
secure.
• Electronic records and new technologies
– support shared decision-making,
– document use of practice guidelines, and
– support evidence-based practice.
Here is how to vary the value statement
by audience…
3. Varying the presentation by audience /
key value for each
Mark Morsch
Varying the presentation by audience /
key value for each
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CXOs of Health Systems
Clinicians
Care Managers
Patients
Payers
Researchers and Analysts
HIM
EHR Vendors
Highlights of Value Statement
• Quality of Documentation
• Ease of Use
• Support for Clinical Decision Making
• Continuity of Care
• Accurate and Complete Electronic Record
• New era of participation by patients, families, and their caregivers
• Providing authorized access to a complete record
• Recognizes and Supports secondary use of data
• Articulating a comprehensive roadmap for interoperable electronic records
• Encouraging and supporting development of cohesive, harmonized specifications
Matching the Value
• CXOs of Health Systems
• Quality of Documentation
• Clinicians
• Ease of Use
• Care Managers
• Support for Clinical Decision Making
• Patients
• Continuity of Care
• Payers
• Accurate and Complete Electronic Record
• Researchers and Analysts
• New era of participation by patients, families, and
their caregivers
• HIM
• EHR Vendors
• Providing authorized access to a complete record
• Recognizes and Supports secondary use of data
• Articulating a comprehensive roadmap for
interoperable electronic records
• Encouraging and supporting development of
cohesive, harmonized specifications
Matching the Value - Clinicians
• CXOs of Health Systems
• Quality of Documentation
• Clinicians
• Ease of Use
• Care Managers
• Patients
• Payers
• Support for Clinical Decision Making
• Continuity of Care
• Accurate and Complete Electronic Record
• Researchers and Analysts
• New era of participation by patients, families, and
their caregivers
• HIM
• Providing authorized access to a complete record
• EHR Vendors
• Recognizes and Supports secondary use of data
• Articulating a comprehensive roadmap for interoperable
electronic records
• Encouraging and supporting development of cohesive,
harmonized specifications
Matching the Value - Patients
• CXOs of Health Systems
• Quality of Documentation
• Clinicians
• Ease of Use
• Care Managers
• Support for Clinical Decision Making
• Patients
• Continuity of Care
• Payers
• Researchers and Analysts
• HIM
• EHR Vendors
• Accurate and Complete Electronic Record
• New era of participation by patients,
families, and their caregivers
• Providing authorized access to a complete
record
• Recognizes and Supports secondary use of
data
• Articulating a comprehensive roadmap for
interoperable electronic records
• Encouraging and supporting development of
cohesive, harmonized specifications
Matching the Value - HIM
• CXOs of Health Systems
• Quality of Documentation
• Clinicians
• Ease of Use
• Care Managers
• Support for Clinical Decision Making
• Patients
• Continuity of Care
• Payers
• Accurate and Complete Electronic Record
• Researchers and Analysts
• New era of participation by patients, families, and
their caregivers
• HIM
• EHR Vendors
• Providing authorized access to a complete
record
• Recognizes & Supports secondary use of data
• Articulating a comprehensive roadmap for
interoperable electronic records
• Encouraging and supporting development of
cohesive, harmonized specifications
4. The basic elements of a Health Story
Project elevator pitch
Nick Mahurin
Goal
Create a hook so they want to follow up to learn more.
View from Space
Risk: Don’t try to accomplish too much.
Two pillars:
• Concept
• Relevance
Concept
Started by an industry consortium dedicated to
preserving narrative (as the EMR era took hold with
it’s emphasis on structured data) by developing
templates for common medical report types using a
healthcare specific implementation of XML called
CDA.
Relevance
• In addition to creating these templates under an associated charter
agreement with HL7, the Department of HHS included
Consolidated CDA in Meaningful Use Stage 2 requirements for
EMRs.
• The powerful implication is that, arguably for the first time ever, we
have a common electronic record that all EMRs are required to be
able to send and receive.
• This is a monumental achievement in health information and will
support providers sharing information as well as service providers.
Vary by Audience
Even more essential in a shorter presentation.
Examples:
• XML – Only for IT people you expect already understand
the Health Story Project
• Narrative/ Structured – Need to be spelled out for some
audiences.
Listen to our recordings from Past Roundtable
Meetings Online www.himss.org/health-story-project
Resources
• Health Story Project Website
– www.himss.org/health-story-project
• For more information or assistance contact:
– Alex Lippitt at [email protected]
– Nancy Ramirez at [email protected]