Transcript Document
eHealth: Contributing to health care quality, accessibility and productivity 1 Sarah Muttitt , Vice-President, Innovation and Adoption, Canada Health Infoway October 30 2007 The paper jungle In spite of spectacular advances in medicine, the foundation of health care delivery in Canada is still paper-based: Each year, almost all of these records are hand-written • 100 million physician exam records • 400 million prescriptions • 500 million lab and radiology tests 2 Current challenges PREVENTION Poor compliance with prevention guidelines • 37– 43% of Canadians recommended for influenza protection not vaccinated • 30–40% of women at risk of cervical cancer not screened 3 DIAGNOSIS Huge opportunity for errors, poor customer service, and repeat diagnostic tests • $15 billion worth of prescriptions are ordered by hand annually • 1 billion service events scheduled manually • 32 % of ER patients missing required information, leading to an average increased stay of 1.2 hours TREATMENT AND RECOVERY Wrong decisions being made • One in nine patients receive wrong medication or wrong dosage • Up to 24,000 deaths each year result from preventable adverse events in hospitals, largely to incomplete information - more deaths than from breast cancer, motor vehicle accidents, and HIV combined The need for health information management Providers, managers, Consumerism is growing Pressures on resources are greater patients, public are demanding more IT has potential to enable solutions to address pressures 4 Population is aging Care settings are shifting Where are we today? According to an August 2007 study by the Conference Board of Canada: • Fewer than one-in-four Canadian primary care doctors use electronic medical records to keep track of patients, the lowest of all countries in the OECD In a 2006 Commonwealth Fund survey, Canada ranked last: Country Netherlands New Zealand United Kingdom Australia Canada 5 Physicians who use EMRs 98% 92% 89% 79% 23% Annual IT spending Percentage of total budgets/revenues 5.4 4.5 4.7 4.0 Canada’s health care system is so huge it would rank No. 10 on the Fortune 500. It is more than three times the size of the country’s largest bank (compared to total revenue). Yet Canada underinvests in health care IT relative to other health care providers and information management industries. 3.4 2.9 1.5 – 2.0 Education 6 US HC providers UK health care Calgary Professional services Regional Health Authority US banking/ financial services HC IT spend Canadian jurisdictions Canada Health Infoway • Created in 2001 • $1.6 billion in federal funding to date • Independent, not-for-profit corporation • Equally accountable to 14 federal/provincial/territorial governments 7 Mission: Goal: To foster and accelerate the development and adoption of electronic health information systems with compatible standards and communications technologies on a pan-Canadian basis with tangible benefits to Canadians. By 2010, every province and territory and the populations they serve will benefit from new health information systems that will help modernize their health care system. Further, 50 per cent of Canadians will have their electronic health record readily available to their authorized professionals who provide their healthcare services. What is an EHR? An electronic health record (EHR) provides each individual in Canada with a secure and private lifetime record of their key health history and care within the healthcare system. The record is available electronically to authorized health care providers and the individual anywhere, anytime in support of high quality care. 8 Access to detailed data Results and images Patient information Medical alerts Medication history Interactions Problem list 9 Immunization EHR: Overall benefits and value • • • • Reduced wait-times for diagnostic imaging services Improved availability of community based health services Reduced patient travel time and cost to access services Increased patient participation in home care Access • • • • Improved interpretation of diagnostic and laboratory results Decreased adverse drug events Decreased prescription errors Increased speed and accuracy in detecting infectious disease outbreaks Quality • • • • Increased access to integrated patient information Reduced duplicate tests and prescriptions Reduced physician prescription call-backs Reduced patient and provider travel costs Productivity Capital cost: $10 billion – $12 billion Benefits: $ 6 billion – $7 billion in savings annually 10 March 2004 = $123 million 53 projects Phase 0/1 Projects June 2007 = $1.203 billion 11 233 projects Phase 2 Projects System in place Infoway benefit evaluation framework The framework articulates the link between the systems in which Infoway invests and the resulting benefits, providing a basis for measurement. NET BENEFITS System quality Functionality Performance Security Information quality Content Availability Service quality Responsiveness 12 Quality Use Use Behavior/ Pattern Self Reported Use Intention to Use User Satisfaction Competency User Satisfaction Ease of Use •Patient safety •Appropriateness/ effectiveness •Health outcomes Access •Ability of patients/providers to access services •Patient and caregiver participation Productivity •Efficiency •Care coordination •Net cost An expanding EHR circle? 13 Infoway’s mandate is to increase the use of electronic health records to improve the provision of patient care As we move toward the next generation of health care, the envisioned health infostructures will enable data collection and potential sharing for secondary purposes Whether it’s for health system management, quality improvement, population health or health research, there are huge benefits to be realized The coming EHR world should streamline data collection, and improve the pervasive availability of data and the timeliness of the information The EHR Blueprint JURISDICTIONAL INFOSTRUCTURE Ancillary Data on the EHR Blueprint will have EHR Data The EHR solutions based the features to & Services & Services allow other uses of clinically relevant data while protecting confidentiality Client Immunization PHS Shared Drug Diagnostic Registry of data and the privacy of patients and providers Laboratory Management Reporting Health Record Information Imaging Data Warehouse Registries Data & Services Health Information Provider The data warehouse is to facilitate the controlled disclosure of anonymized personal health information for secondary use and prevents trolling through Location Business EHR Message Normalization Terminology Registry Rules in the Index Rules the available data EHR Structures Repository Registry Longitudinal Record Services Relevant, reliable data, required for a given purpose, could be extracted from the EHR, anonymized at the point of extraction, and stored in one or Security Mgmt Privacy Data Configuration more data warehouses where security is assured and audited Data Common Services HIAL Communication Bus Public Health Services Public Health Provider POINT OF SERVICE 14 Pharmacy System Pharmacist Radiology Center PACS/RIS Radiologist Lab System (LIS) Lab Clinician Hospital, LTC, CCC, EPR Physician/ Provider Physician Office EMR Physician/ Provider EHR Viewer Physician/ Provider Thank you 15