Archive for June, 2009

Can Health Care Learn from Netflix?

Monday, June 29th, 2009

A multinational, multidisciplinary team apparently has won $1 million for improving the algorithms that Netflix uses to recommend movies to its users. The winning team — which includes statisticians, computer engineers and machine learning experts from the US, Austria, Israel and Canada — developed a program that improves the accuracy of movie recommendations by more than 10%.

Ix innovation design is a new focus for the Center for Information Therapy, in part through our collaboration with IDEO and the California HealthCare Foundation. We are eager to identify more robust methods for driving breakthrough innovations in patient-centered HIT applications.

For years, I’ve wondered why we see so few examples in the health care world of the Netflix or Amazon approach to guiding consumers to the information that they want. A huge success factor in information therapy (Ix) is the degree to which information prescribing can develop algorithms that effectively translate individual pieces of data into information triggers. The more data we can collect and efficiently transfer through electronic infrastructure and the more information derived from the consumers themselves, the greater the chance that we can prescribe or deliver the right information to the right person at the right time.

Netflix knows what movies I request and often how I rate them. They also ask me (in a very quick, convenient way) to rate other movies that I’ve seen. They put these data points together and somehow electronically try to make sense of someone who loved “The Killing Fields” and “This Is Spinal Tap,” but who was not enamored with “The Matrix.” They seem to do a reasonably good job, and perhaps this new program that was developed by the interdisciplinary team will deliver better movie recommendations to me.

That’s all fun, but it’s not my health — or my family’s health. There, the stakes are higher, and the information needs are several orders of magnitude more complex.

In trying to meet that need and challenge, the X-Prize Foundation has developed a health care competition, putting $10 million on the line. Unlike Netflix, however, this isn’t all about 1’s and 0’s. Changing the way health care is delivered involves a lot more than modeling scenarios on a computer.

That said, we can probably borrow a lot from the computer engineers, statisticians and machine learning experts and transfer those learnings to Ix innovation. To do so, however, we need those experts to join forces with clinicians, patients and ethnographers/anthropologists in order to make sure that what we learn has meaning for consumers and can be embedded into the clinical workflow.

Comments on Meaningful Use

Friday, June 26th, 2009

As I wrote last week, HHS’s Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) for Health Information Technology (HIT) and the HIT Policy Committee advising it have made substantial progress in defining “meaningful use” (MU) of HIT. Comments on ONC’s first draft MU definition are due today, and the IxCenter has been working in collaboration with many other consumer-oriented organization through the Consumer Partnership for eHealth (CPeH). The Center for Information Therapy enthusiastically supports the CPeH input, which has been spearheaded by Eva Powell and Christine Bechtel from the National Partnership for Women & Families.

First, it’s important to be clear about what the tens of billions of dollars in the American Recovery & Reinvestment Act (ARRA) for HIT incentive were designed to promote. The legislation made it clear that taxpayers didn’t want to pay providers for “flipping a switch” to turn on an HIT system. American taxpayers want their money to be spent on “meaningful use” of HIT that improves the quality and efficiency of care delivery. So, CPeH frames the issue with the following statement:

“HIT is an essential tool for providing patient-centered care, and therefore the definition of its meaningful use should be patient-centered, reflect a clear, stepwise approach for workflow redesign and should signal, from the outset, a bold shift in the culture of health care.”

That framing is important. It also reflects, at least to some degree, ONC’s starting point with its June 16 draft definition. Building on this approach, there are some important areas in which CPeH believes the MU draft definition can be strengthened. I will outline a few of the key points below, and provide some commentary of my own. The full comments of CPeH include considerably more detail.

“The objectives and measures should be linked more clearly to the ultimate goal of improving health outcomes and the efficient use of health care resources, and be verified in robust ways.”

By tying each goal to a patient engagement component of meaningful use, we can guide MU of HIT to whether it delivers meaningful, useful information to patients and families. We should measure things that directly matter to consumers in terms of their functional status and experience with care, and we stratify measurement by gender, race, ethnicity, and primary language spoken to determine MU is achieved for all populations.

“Care coordination should be emphasized as a top initial priority for meaningful EHR use.”

It’s important that MU of HIT not lead only to good silos of information distribution, but rather allow for the efficient exchange of meaningful information. Health information exchange (HIE) can reduce fragmentation of the delivery system and facilitate effective care coordination if meaningful information can be transferred not only among providers but also to and from consumers. After-visit care summaries for clinicians and patients are a critical piece of this care coordination.

“Patient engagement must be fully integrated into all aspects of health care delivery through the innovative use of technology.”

We must ensure consumers access to information in a way that they can understand and use it. That information needs to provide decision support and assistance in managing health behaviors for prevention and chronic care self-management. MU of HIT also should facilitate better communication among clinicians and patients to encourage participatory medicine. And HIT systems should allow inputs from all relevant actors, certainly including data and information deriving from the consumers themselves.

“Information about patients’ experience of care should be collected and used for improvement….We recommend that steps toward this goal should be taken in 2013, not delayed until 2015.”

Measuring consumer experience of care is central to what MU of HIT is all about.

Today is the last day for providing comments to ONC on the first draft of its MU definition (see here for instructions). As the iterative process of defining MU develops, we’ll continue to follow and update here on this blog.

Of Marathons & Health Reform

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

As a marathoner, I’ve been known to throw a few running metaphors around, so I take note when others do as well. If some journalists and bloggers are right, it appears that the fate of health care reform may depend on what happens when legislators hit the proverbial “Wall.”

In today’s New York Times, David Herszenhorn (in “Baucus Grabs Pacesetter Role on Health Bill”) builds off Senator Max Baucus’s history with ultramarathoning in explaining the mammoth legislative battle of health care reform.

“In many ways, the push to overhaul health care is a legislative ultramarathon. And however improbable it might seem, Mr. Baucus, son of a rancher and great-grandson of a member of the Cowboy Hall of Fame, is setting the pace.”

Herszenhorn concludes the piece with a parallel between the pain and endurance required for both marathoning and health care reform, citing comments of OMB Director Peter Orzag:

“Mr. Orszag, who has agonized over health care costs for years, noted the Montana senator’s penchant for pain. “I am struck,” Mr. Orszag said, “by how he describes this as fun.”

In her blog post last week, “The Week in Health Reform - Hitting a Speed Bump,” Jocelyn Guyer of the Georgetown Health Policy Institute’s Center for Children & Families, concluded with a Boston Marathon metaphor:

“We may be heading up Heartbreak Hill, but the marathon of health reform is far from over.”

I’m sure these aren’t the the first two pundits to compare the federal legislative process to a marathon, and health care has obvious connections because of the physical and mental health and challenges associated with marathoning. The arduous and grinding task of continuous strenuous effort definitely is reminiscent of the pain one endures during the course of a 26.2 mile effort on foot.

For those of us who lived through the 1993-94 health reform marathon, all the preparation appeared to make some sort of health care reform an inevitability before legislators figuratively “bonked” when they hit the Wall. The early mistakes in the health reform run eventually caught up to the Clinton administration, ultimately resulting in  a DNF (did not finish).

Now, after years more training under our collective belts, leaders appear to be well hydrated and much better prepared, having learned lessons that one can only truly understand by doing it wrong before. But many factors often crop up in a marathon that you know may transpire but still reduce you to a long slog — the blazing sun and 86-degree weather of the 2004 Boston Marathon come to mind for me. Payment reform, debate about the role of government, and new tax policy appear to be the weather front coming our way.

The key on Patriot’s Day 2004 was to keep repeating in my mind a single mantra: “Keep putting one foot in front of another.” It sure was no PR. I lost about 30 minutes that day. But I eventually got to the finish line on Boylston Street.

Whatever people think about the Chairman of the Senate Finance Committee, the story Herszenhorn tells about Senator Baucus completing the JFK 50-Miler with a gash across his forehead suggests that he has no shortage of perseverance and fortitude as he persists in the enormous undertaking of health care reform.

Let’s hope that legislators cross the finish line in the mold of Frank Shorter in 1972 or Joan Benoit Samuelson in 1984, and we don’t recreate the parable of Pheidippides along the way.

Declaration of Health Data Rights

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

I’m announcing my support for the Declaration of Health Data Rights, which was launched today. More information is available at HealthDataRights.org. The declaration reads:

In an era when technology is allowing personal health information to be more easily stored, updated, accessed and exchanged, the following rights should be self-evident and inalienable. We the people:

  • Have the right to our own health data
  • Have the right to know the source of each health data element
  • Have the right to take possession of a complete copy of our individual health data, without delay, at minimal or no cost; If data exist in computable form, they must be made available in that form
  • Have the right to share our health data with others as we see fit

These principles express basic human rights as well as essential elements of health care that is participatory, appropriate and in the interests of each patient. No law or policy should abridge these rights.

I support the principles of the Declaration. Clearly, to me, this is one important step (out of many) to empower consumers with information. We know, however, that being able to access clinical and administrative data is just the beginning of that process.

As I’ve written before, we need to build on data access rights to help translate data into understandable, meaningful information. Then, we have to build tools to translate good information into user knowledge. Finally, with that base, we need to create strategies for converting knowledge into behavior.

Break-Out Innovation

Monday, June 22nd, 2009

I had the opportunity to meet with Aneesh Chopra — our country’s first Chief Technology Officer — last week. The CTO serves as Associate Director of the Obama administration’s Office of Science & Technology Policy (OSTP), which “serves as a source of scientific and technological analysis and judgment for the President with respect to major policies, plans and programs of the Federal Government.” OSTP will also lead interagency efforts on a wide range of science and technology policy issues, certainly to include health information technology (HIT) in collaboration with David Blumenthal in the Office of the National Coordinator for HIT.

Chopra — whom I’ve known for years from our days together at the Advisory Board Company — is not only really sharp but very creative in thinking into the future about how technology can evolve. The opportunity is enormous, but capitalizing on it requires more than just technology development but policy planning as well. One could argue that the pace of technology advance over the last several decades arguably has outpaced our imagination, yet we haven’t harnessed those breakthroughs in the form of health care productivity or quality gains.

The New York Times Sunday Business section explored the government’s role in stimulating innovation yesterday. Steve Lohr cites Chopra’s interest in building “innovation platforms” to spur growth, but Lohr notes that there are at least nine countries that have been more aggressive than the U.S. in using government to drive innovation: Australia, Brazil, Britain, Chile, Colombia, Finland, India, Norway and Singapore.

The Center for Information Therapy (IxCenter) also has been focused recently on how stimulate more robust innovation in the field of information therapy (Ix). In some ways, this was a natural evolution of our partnership with Health 2.0, LLC, in preparing for the first-ever “Health 2.0 Meets Ix” conference we held two months ago. There, we explored (among other things) how innovative health 2.0 tools could be combined with Ix strategies to create new models for health care delivery.

We also have launched two collaborative projects with IDEO — the innovation design firm responsible for creating everything from the first Apple mouse to the Swiffer — in our search for rapid-cycle innovation in Ix strategies. Thanks to a grant from the California HealthCare Foundation, we will work with IDEO to develop Ix strategies to overcome barriers in implementing innovative consumer engagement strategies with safety-net populations in California. We will address text-messaging applications and other approaches to information prescribing.

Another experiment involves applying the IDEO model to Ix innovation design with our IxAction Alliance in its monthly webinar. In addition to trying to develop a robust model for Ix innovation design, we also are testing out whether we can apply the highly intensive in-person workshops and collective observation of users to the virtual and dispersed nature of our monthly IxInsights webinars. That has major policy planning implications in terms of the scalability and efficiency of how we stimulate innovation nationwide.

The IxCenter will be actively pursuing robust approaches Ix innovation design strategies over the coming months, and we’ll certainly be sharing everything we learn in this space. In the interim, it would be great to get suggestions and other input from readers on the best strategies for rapid-cycle, breakthrough innovation.

Making Progress on Meaningful Use

Tuesday, June 16th, 2009

At the second meeting of HHS’s HIT Policy Committee today, the committee’s Meaningful Use (MU) Workgroup offered a proposal that represents some important strides forward. From an overarching perspective, we can see progress in the fact that engaging patients and families is now one of the primary four or five goals for how “meaningful use” of HIT can transform health care.

The HHS Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) for HIT distributed a matrix along with the presentation by MU workgroup co-chairs Paul Tang and Farzad Mostashari. One of the five health outcomes policy priorities is “Engage patients and families,” and the associated care goal is “Provide patients and faimiles with access to data, knowledge, and tools to make informed decisions and to manage their health.”

Interestingly, when Mostashari presented the “achievable vision for 2015,” the slide advocated for “All patients have access to their own health information.” But Mostashari said, “All patients have access to the information they need to have.” I think the latter describes a broader set of information needs and would do more to meet the health outcomes policy priority.

For the 2011 objectives, Tang stated that the MU Workgroup’s “goal is to capture in coded format and to report health information and to use that information to track key clinical conditions.” By 2013, the goal becomes “guide and support care processes and care coordination,” leaving “achieve and improve perofrmance ans support care proceses and on key health system outcomes” by 2015.

The 2011 objectives under engage patients and families:

  • Provide patients with electronic copy of — or access to — clinical information (including lab results, problem list, medication lists, allergies) per patient preference (e.g., through PHR) for outpatient (OP) and inpatient (IP) care
  • Provide access to patient-specific educational resources (OP/IP)
  • Provide clinical summaries for patients for each encounter (OP/IP)

For 2013:

  • Offer secure patient-provider messaging capability (OP)
  • Provide access to patient-specific educational resources in common primary languages (OP/IP)
  • Record patient preferences (e.g., preferred communication media, advance directive, health care proxies, treatment options) (OP/IP)
  • Documentation of family medical history (OP/IP)
  • Upload data from home monitoring devoices (OP)

For 2015:

  • Access for all patients to PHR populated in real time with data from EHR (OP/IP)
  • Patients have access to self-management tools (OP)
  • Electronic reporting on experience of care (OP/IP)

Many of these elements derive from the document that the Consumer Partnership for eHealth developed (a process in which the IxCenter was involved), though there are some areas where some improvements in the ONC document would go a long way toward driving better care. Some of these points were made during the meeting by HIT Policy Committee member Christine Bechtel, which I voiced support for during the public comment period, and I also added some of my own (or expanded on themes raised by Christine) there and here.

  • Certainly, some of the elements should be moved up — earlier in the timeline (e.g., secure messaging, patient access to self-management tools & decision support, and electronic reporting on experience of care).
  • The access to electronic information needs to be “timely” (a word that should be added); timely applies both to the speed at which it is made available and the ability to get information targeted to the consumer’s particular moment in care.
  • Incorporation of data generated by the consumers themselves beyond just what can be uploaded from electronic monitoring devices (per the 2013 criterion).
  • There should be more attention to consumer information tools (beyond just narrowly definted personal health records) and more clarity around the kinds of tools that consumers need — not just self-management tools but also decision support tools and tools that facilitate effective & efficient communication to improve the infrastructure for participatory medicine.

Finally, although clinical summaries are mentioned in this section, there are more ways in which improving care coordination (one of the other key five goals identified by the committee along with: engaging patients and families; improve quality, safety, efficiency, and reduce health disparities; improve population & public health; and ensure adequate privacy & security protections for personal health information). Specifically, the stated care goal for “improve care coordination” is “exchange meaningful clinical information among professional health care team.” Given that, for many of the measures proposed in the care coordination section, there is substantial research to support exchanging clinical information with patients and families improves care, reduces readmissions, etc., there should be an explicit inclusion of patients & families in that exchange.

If you also would like to share your comments with ONC, instructions for doing so are here.

Finding Patient-Centered Care in the HELP Health Reform Bill

Friday, June 12th, 2009

The Senate Health Education, Labor & Pensions (HELP) Committee released its piece of the comprehensive health care reform bill on June 9. Despite being 615 pages long, several key provisions of any health care reform legislation are not in the HELP Committee bill because they are issues that fall under the jurisdiction of the Finance Committee. Most of the issues related to Medicare, Medicaid, other public options, and taxes (basically how to pay for expanded coverage) will be proposed in the Finance bill, likely coming out next week.

But HELP is first to the table, and may start marking up this bill as early Tuesday, June 16. So it’s worth looking at the bill and asking: What key features of it facilitate more patient-centered health care delivery?

Perhaps most importantly, the provisions of the Wyden-Gregg “Empowering Medicare Patient Choices Act” (see here for overview) that fall under the jurisdiction of HELP are included in Sec. 217, Program to Facilitate Shared Decision-Making (pp. 301-311). Much of the meat of this bill (Medicare carrots and sticks) comes under the jurisdiction of the Finance Committee, but this is a critically important start.

Sec. 212. Grants to Establish Community Health Teams to Support a Medical Home Model provides several opportunities for driving patient-centered care delivery and the provision of information therapy (Ix), though much will depend on how it is implemented. Opportunities include emphasis on “payment that recognizes added value to patient in a patient-centered care; [sic]” (a few typos aren’t surprising when those Hill staffers are working round-the-clock these days). There is also a recognition that support should be provided to PCPs to “provide quality-driven, cost-effective, culturally appropriate, and patient- and family-centered health care” and “promote effective strategies for treatment planning…sharing information, treatment decision support…”

The role of Ix in patient-centered discharge planning and reducing readmissions is highlighted in both the medical home section and in Sec. 216. Reducing and Reporting Hospital Readmissions (see here for discussion of Ix role in this area). Ix and patient-centered HIT are also an important part of the solution for Sec. 213. Grants to Implement Medication Management Services in Treatment of Chronic Disease.

Admittedly, I haven’t finished all 615 pages, so I’ll probably find more in here over the weekend. If you think I’ve missed answers to my question (What key features of it facilitate more patient-centered health care delivery?), please add in the Comments section.

What’s New in the New Pew Data?

Thursday, June 11th, 2009

The latest version of the e-health bible was published today by Susannah Fox & Sydney Jones at the Pew Internet & American Life Project. For nearly a decade, many of us have relied on Pew’s data to understand consumer needs with respect to health information technology (HIT). Susannah gave a sneak preview of some of Pew’s new data at our April “Health 2.0 Meets Information Therapy Conference,” but there’s nothing quite like getting to sink your teeth into 70 pages of Pew data.

Some of what’s most interesting is what has changed in the last 8 or 9 years. In recent conversations I’ve had about Healthy People 2020 or other prognostications about the next decade of HIT developments, we sometimes forget how quickly the world changes technologically speaking. Comparing Pew’s 2000 data to Nov-Dec 2008 sample of American adults:

  • Internet access: Jumped from 46% to 71%
  • Looking online for health information: Jumped from 25% to 61%
  • Broadband access: Jumped from from 5% to 57%

Just as importantly, however, there’s a little bit of plus ça change, plus c’est la même chose. Despite the growing popularity of the Web, more people turn to a health care professional (86%) and a friend or family member (68%) than the Internet (57%).

Perhaps what I’ve always found most important about the Pew data is understanding the impact of the Web on how consumers make health decisions. After all, if a Google search falls in the forest and nobody does anything with the tree they downloaded, has it really made a difference?

Indeed, Pew data demonstrate that the information found on the Internet does influence decision making for a majority of consumers who go online. Of those people:

  • 60% say the information found online affected a decision about how to treat an illness or condition.
  • 56% say it changed their overall approach to maintaining their health or the health of someone they help take care of.
  • 53% say it lead them to ask a doctor new questions, or to get a second opinion from another doctor.
  • 49% say it changed the way they think about diet, exercise, or stress management.
  • 38% say it affected a decision about whether to see a doctor.
  • 38% say it changed the way they cope with a chronic condition or manage pain.

And, on the critical “help or hurt” question, 60% of online health users say they or someone they know has been helped by following medical advice or health information found on the Internet, in contrast to just 3% who say it has caused harm. The former figure has nearly doubled since 2006, whereas the latter has stayed the same.

I’m not disappointed (but not surprised) that consumer engagement tools seem to not have done a great job so far. Only 19% of online health users have signed up to receive updates about health or medical issues. We clearly need to do a better job of meeting people where they are at in order to get them more engaged in online management of their health.

Finally, for understanding the impact of demographics on Americans’ use of the Internet, broadband, and cell phones, there’s nothing that tells the story as well as Pew’s access thermometers, which have now been updated with December 2008 data.

(Methodology Sidebar: Pew — in part made possible by its partnership with the California HealthCare Foundation — deserves special credit for two methodological advances. First, Pew now surveys (I think they added this a year or two ago) using both landline and cell phone samples, recognizing that an increasing and unevenly distributed portion of the US population cannot be reached by landline (this issue got a lot of press — particularly from places like Pollster.com and 538.com — during the 2008 presidential primaries and general election, as many thought that could lead to underestimations of the Obama vote). Second, they did Spanish-language interviewing to capture information from the second most prevalent language spoken in the US. This substantially improves the validity of all of Pew’s demographic comparisons that involve Latinos.)

Thanks to Pew for continuing to facilitate a data-driven conversation about consumer behavior with respect to the Internet.

Ix Across the Pond

Tuesday, June 9th, 2009

My meeting experience using Cisco’s TelePresence technology brought new meaning to the phrase “just like being there.” I had a lively conversation with some of the UK’s leading information prescribing advocates this morning (or this afternoon if you were sitting on the other side of the table in England).

Two of the participants were from Cisco’s Internet Business Solutions unitKevin Dean from the UK side and Danny Sands (who also sits on the IxCenter Board of Directors) — normally in Boston but was down in DC today. Also on the other side of what truly felt like one oval table were John Cain from the UK Department of Health — who has headed up a lot of their patient empowerment work — and Mark Duman, President of the Patient Information Forum.

As I’ve described before, the UK government is way ahead of the US in this area, having already written into their National Health Service Constitution a guaranteed right to information in advance of any treatment. The UK government has taken a leadership role in advancing information prescribing throughout the country.

What I did learn more about today is that converting such good intentions into Ix that is embedded into standard care delivery is still a work in progress. The UK Department of Health currently funds the information prescribing activities, but the National Health Service (NHS) has not yet been able to embed Ix into the care delivery process of NHS providers. The result is that much of the Ix transpiring in the UK is actually from the UK government directly to the people. It’s more of the over-the-counter Ix model.

The UK Department of Health has several Ix initiatives in the works. They are developing tools to make information prescribing easier to use in normal practice settings. They are developing information standards and accreditation processes. They also figuring out how to embed patient experience into the design of Ix services. And, more regionally, other efforts are advancing Ix, such as Scotland’s national health information service that has citizen advice bureaus staffed by health navigators to guide consumers to needed, personalized information.

I shared with my friends across the pond some of the critical opportunities to advance information prescribing now in the US. The IxCenter continues to work closely with several agencies within the U.S. Department of Health & Human Services (HHS) on the development of an information prescribing objective for Healthy People 2020. In addition, legislation to require patient decision aids, a consumer view of “meaningful use” of HIT, more emphasis on consumer needs in the roll-out of comparative effectiveness research, and other legislation could go a long way toward embedding expectations of Ix into everyday care delivery. I also described the IxCenter’s work around advancing more robust models for evaluating the quality of health information.

Our small group had far more to discuss than time available. We’ve agreed to continue our cross-national conversations on information prescribing best practices and strategies for infrastructure development. Hopefully, we’ll continue to learn a lot from our international dialog and truly embed information prescribing into care delivery processes.

Meaningful Use of HIT for Consumers

Friday, June 5th, 2009

For the past several months, the Center for Information Therapy (IxCenter) has been working alongside other consumer advocates to guide the HHS definition of “meaningful use” of EHRs to include consumer access to meaningful information. Part of that collaboration has been with the Consumer Partnership for eHealth (CPeH), which has brought together many organizations dedicated to advancing a patient-centered care delivery system. We also believe it’s important to build a meaningful use definition off of robust definitions of patient-centered care, such as that proposed recently by Don Berwick.

With the decisions on meaningful use now being hammered out by the Office of the National Coordinator (ONC) for HIT with input from the HIT Policy Committee (with detailed guidance from a meaningful use workgroup), CPeH has developed a consumer pathway to meaningful use to help inform the discussions.

Here’s an overview of our recommendations:

  • To ensure care is comprehensive, coordinated, personalized and planned:
    • By 2011:
      • Care summary is generated and shared with the patient and other authorized providers and family caregivers after every visit or
        discharge.
      • Reminders about preventive services, medications, necessary/routine tests, and follow-up care are sent to patients via their preferred medium
    • By 2013:
      • Prompts and key information (patient preferences, health goals, functional status, preferred language, advance directives and social situation) are used to individualize and customize care
      • Patient generated data is incorporated into the clinical context for individualized care
      • Connections are made to community resources
  • To ensure patients and their caregivers are partners, making informed, shared decisions:
    • By 2011:
      • Patients have electronic access to the lab results, medication lists and problem lists
      • Care summary (see above)
      • Patients are connected to resources that help them understand their medical information in the context of their specific health needs
      • Providers make available shared decision making tools to promote partnership in care and treatment decisions
    • By 2013:
      • Patients have real-time electronic access to their medical record along with linkages to tools that make the information meaningful and useful to them
      • Patients have access to evidence-based decision support tools that enable informed choices tailored to their preferences
  • To ensure transitions between settings of care are smooth, safe, effective and efficient:
    • By 2011:
      • Care summary (see above)
    • By 2013:
      • Referrals are made to online patient coaching and/or other self-care management tools
  • To ensure patients can get care when, where, and how they need it:
    • By 2011:
      • Patients are able to use secure messaging or email for more timely and beneficial communication with their providers
      • Personal health records (PHRs) or other consumer tools are populated by providers and are easily portable
    • By 2013:
      • Patients are able to use online scheduling for more convenient access to their care providers
      • Providers use remote monitoring to manage patients with chronic illnesses in the least restrictive way
      • Electronic tools provided by the health care team are accessible to people with visual, hearing, mobility, cognitive, and other impairments (and in multiple languages)
  • To ensure patients and their caregivers are participants in continuous quality improvement:
    • By 2011:
      • Information about patients’ experience of care is collected electronically and used to improve
      • Quality data are electronically generated, aggregated and publicly reported in ways that are meaningful for consumer use
      • Information about race, ethnicity, primary language, and gender is collected and used in ongoing efforts to reduce disparities
    • By 2013:
      • Data regarding cost and the clinical quality of care are electronically collected and publicly reported for consumer use
      • Outcomes measures are reported stratified by race, ethnicity, primary language, and gender to spur disparities reduction

We firmly believe that effective, meaningful use of HIT can help create a platform for a better, more efficient health care delivery system, but only if we design it to meet consumers’ needs and preferences at the right time, in the right setting, and in the right way. The elements above will take us a long way in getting there.

For those interested in the detailed recommendations from CPeH, please contact me directly or leave a note in the comments section.