Posted 12:55PM EST, May 09, 2008
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TheHill.com has posted an interview with Mike Leavitt, Health and Human Services Secretary.  Leavitt talks about several topics, including a new Medicare demonstration project involving small physician practices, the implementation and spread of electronic health records, and the benefits of increasing interoperability standards.
On Wednesday the website The Hill put up the transcript of a Question and Answer session with Health and Human Services Secretary Mike Leavitt.  Leavitt touches on a number of topics.

He is asked about the process of fully wiring the healthcare system and lists a few details about how that will be accomplished.  Leavitt examines the system from the viewpoints of several prominent stakeholders.
We need to have information digitized rather than on paper and we need to have that information mobilized so that it can be assembled in many different ways that are useful, not just to consumers but to various parties. If you look at digital health information, the goal looks different depending on who you are and what your interests are.

If you’re a consumer, you’re interested in having all of your health information accessible to you in a timely, useful way. You’d like to have your pharmacy records for the three pharmacies that you do business with in one place. You’d like to have the information from your doctor, from your hospital, from your specialists, from the labs, accessible to you in one place. You don’t want to have to go to your doctor and pick up a big brown envelope and transport it to a specialist for them to see a test that you took three days before. You’d like that to be electronically transferred, like everything else can be in your life.

If you’re a clinician or a doctor, you’re interested in having a clinical record that has more information than likely a consumer is interested in. You’re interested in being able to have decision-support information that would provide backup for decisions that you need to make, and alternatives and options that would help you make better decisions.

If you are a public-health expert, you’d like to be able to gather a lot of data from many different places. Even though it doesn’t have anyone’s name attached to it, it would provide you with statistical backup to look for trends. If you’re a researcher, you’d like to see something quite similar, but you would like to see it from a wider area.
Later in the interview Leavitt discusses the value of interoperability, and the current status of the goal to make systems able to communicate with one another effectively.
I bumped into, at a pathology bench at Stanford University, a young student who was ready to go out into practice. He said, “I heard your speech about electronic health records and I subscribe to your view. In fact, I’m going to set my practice up next year and I want to buy a system. I only have one question: What system should I buy? I can only afford to do this once and I can’t get it wrong.” It was not possible for me to recommend a system before. Now, I’m able to say to him, “Whatever system you buy, make sure it is CCHIT-compatible. If you do, you’ll be on a pathway to interoperability and your vendor will need to continue to update their system to meet those standards.” I think that’s a significant step forward.

If interoperability was two feet long, we’d be at about the six or eight inches mark. Next year, we will be at eight or 10 inches. Each year, we’ll get a little closer to interoperability. We won’t see full interoperability for some time but we will see functional interoperability beginning to develop real soon.

Read the entire transcript here.  He touches on the challenges to develop a system that transports health information, a new Medicare demonstration project that pays small physicians, obstacles the healthcare industry faces, and why it is important that the federal government is involved in the process of creating I.T. standards for healthcare.


Source: The Hill.