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HIMSS Analytics to change study

By Diana Manos , Contributing writer

Officials of HIMSS Analytics, the not-for-profit subsidiary of the Healthcare Information and management System Society (HIMSS), announced will add new questions to their annual study on meaningful use to gauge hospitals' readiness.


With hospitals expected to complete the first phase of deadlines for meaningful use by 2011 to qualify for bonuses under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, HIMSS Analytics will ask hospitals about their inclusion of structured document standards to convert narrative data to a structured format importable to an electronic medical record.


HIMSS Analytics tracks the EMR implementation status of more than 5,000 U.S., non-governmental hospitals through its annual study with hospital CIOs.  The data gathered provides a detailed look at the clinical and financial application environments in U. S. hospitals. 


HIMSS Analytics also developed the Electronic Medical Record Adoption ModelSM – or EMRAM – to score hospitals in the HIMSS Analytics Database on their .progress in completing the eight stages to creating a paperless patient record environment.


"In our evaluation of EMR Adoption Model scores over 2008-2009, we found that hospitals are continuing to advance the care delivery capabilities of their EMR environment," said John Hoyt, vice president of HIMSS Healthcare Organizational Services.


"ARRA funding incentives are driving EMR implementation," Hoyt said. "With this expanded arsenal of data, HIMSS Analytics can help healthcare providers better understand and follow the Meaningful Use requirements while moving higher on the EMRAM scale." 


According to Liora Alschuler executive committee representative of the Health Story Project, which helped write the new questions for HIMSS Analytics, much of the information in a patient's medical record may be entered by the physician or nurse in chart form, such as notes taken during a clinic visit, lab reports or other information that contributes to the completeness of individual health history. 


Health Story produces data standards for the flow of information between common types of healthcare documents and electronic medical records, Alschuler said.


Alschuler, principal, at Alschuler Associates, LLC, said the Health Story standards are based on HL7 Clinical Document Architecture reusing templates from the Continuity of Care Document. The Health Story Project, founded a little over two years ago, is a nonprofit collaborative of healthcare vendors, providers and associations.


"The members of Health Story believe that all of the clinical information required for good patient care, administration, reporting and research should be readily available electronically, including information from narrative documents," Alschuler said. "With the data gathered from the HIMSS Analytics Study, we will know how hospitals are using document standards to enrich the flow of information to their EMRs."


Officials at HIMSS Analytics said they expect to begin reporting on hospital readiness for meaningful use in September 2010.