Sen. Warner calls for tougher standards for electronic medical records

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Congress’s gambit to create a national system of electronic health records is “at risk of failure or mediocrity” if federal regulators continue to water down the standards that doctors and hospitals must meet, Sen. Mark Warner (D-VA) wrote in a letter to federal health officials.

Lawmakers have set aside $27 billion in Medicare and Medicaid incentives for medical providers to switch to paperless records, and 780 products have already been certified under the first stage of the program created by the 2009 stimulus bill. Sen Warner said the process so far has been “too limited.” For example, regulators don’t publish performance data for certified vendors, and failing to deliver medical data to a public health agency is still acceptable.

For the next stage of the program, Sen Warner wrote, regulators should:

  • Require providers to submit data electronically and allow the Medicare agency to conduct “aggressive oversight of the program”;
  • Mandate “clear and robust” requirements that certified Health Information Technology be able to communicate and exchange data with different types of healthcare providers and systems, including health information exchanges; and
  • Support electronic access by consumers, including the ability to download data in a useful format.

Sen. Warner calls for tougher standards for electronic medical records