Guiding Principles for Stage 1 Meaningful Use Adjustments
Submitted: July 30, 2010 - 4:34pm
Originally published: July 30, 2010
Last updated: November 29, 2010 - 10:43am
Originally published: July 30, 2010
Last updated: November 29, 2010 - 10:43am
Source:
Health IT Buzz
Author:
Joshua Seidman
Location:
Department of Health and Human Services (HHS), 200 Independence Avenue, SW, Washington, DC, 20201, United States
The changes to meaningful use boiled down to four themes:
- Flexibility: We were convinced by commenters that the all-or-nothing approach was not a practical solution for getting the majority of providers on the escalator to meaningful use of EHRs. Building flexibility into the program makes allowances for providers facing a wide variety of external challenges to achieve Stage 1 meaningful use. As a former Surgeon General said about medication adherence, "Medications don't work in patients who don't take them." Likewise, EHRs have no benefits if providers don't implement them.
- Simplicity: We increased feasibility of calculating HIT functionality measures by substantially reducing the reporting burden for providers. This was primarily achieved by eliminating manual chart review requirements and using electronic calculation of denominators for the HIT functionality measure denominators.
- Consistency: Wherever we could, we tried to align the program requirements—hospitals and professionals, Medicare and Medicaid. Registration for the Medicare incentive programs will begin in January 2011, and State Medicaid agencies will launch any time, beginning in January 2011. With the possible exception of a very limited set of public health functionalities, the Medicare and Medicaid will have the same meaningful use objectives and measures.
- Quality & Patient-Centeredness: We always evaluated the three principles above with an eye toward the fundamentals of meaningful use: making care delivery more patient-centered and improving the quality, safety and efficiency of health care. We never lost sight of the laser focus that the meaningful use principle provided: It's not about the technology; it's about transforming health care delivery for the benefit of patients and everybody else involved in their care.
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