Should Healthcare IT reform come from the private sector or the government?

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  1. Should health care IT reform come from the private sector or the government?

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      The private sector should drive health care IT reform
    • 1
      Health care IT reform should be backed by goverment incentives, funding initiatives and legislature
    • 1
      Health care IT reform should be a joint effort of both goverment and private sector stakeholders

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Specializes in Informatics, Education, and Oncology.

From iHealthBeat

Monday, July 28, 2008-TODAY'S NEWS

Think Tank Blasts Federal Health Care IT Efforts

The Heartland Institute called the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT's five-year strategic plan for boosting health IT adoption "poorly conceived." The think tank argues that the public sector has a poor track record of implementing large information systems and that health care reform should come from the private sector rather than the government. Healthcare IT News.

HHS' Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT on Tuesday, June 3rd released a five-year strategic plan to serve as a guide to coordinate the federal government's health IT efforts, Digital Healthcare & Productivity reports.

"The plan provides an extensive documentation of the work completed by ONC and other federal partners over the past five years," National Coordinator for Health IT Robert Kolodner said in a press release, adding, "It also establishes the next generation of health IT milestones to harness the power of information technology to help transform health and care in the country."

Plan Details

The "ONC-Coordinated Federal Health IT Strategic Plan: 2008-2012" includes two main goals: patient-focused health care and population health, Healthcare IT News reports.

The patient-focused health care goal "envisions a transformation to higher-quality, more cost-efficient care [and] meeting patients' needs through electronic health record information access and use," according to ONC. Meanwhile, the office's population health goal is to provide appropriate and timely access and use of electronic health information to boost public health, biomedical research, quality improvement and emergency preparedness (Monegain, Healthcare IT News, 6/3).

In addition, the plan provides timelines for achieving more than 40 milestones in the areas of:

Adoption;

Collaborative governance;

Interoperability; and

Privacy and security (Health Data Management, 6/3).

To reach these goals, the plan calls for:

Engaging multiple stakeholders across the public and private sectors;

Addressing reliability, confidentiality, privacy and security when exchanging, storing and using electronic health data; and

Focusing on the health care consumer as a key participant (Healthcare IT News, 6/3).

ONC's health IT plan was created in collaboration with 12 agencies and staff divisions within HHS; the Departments of Commerce, Defense and Veterans Affairs; and the Federal Communications Commission. The National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics and the American Health Information Community also contributed to the plan (Digital Healthcare & Productivity, 6/3).

For a copy of OCN's 5 year plan go to:

http://www.hhs.gov/healthit/resources/HITStrategicPlan.pdf

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