eClinicalWorks Blog Details

  • 3 August 2020
  • Blog

我nteroperability: Putting Data in the Right Hands

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我n the right hands, medical data is priceless.

The right hands include authorized providers, for whom access to the most up-to-date patient data is essential for informed decision-making and better and safer medicine. Ensuring patients also enjoy on-demand access to their own medical records is critical for making them full partners in their healthcare.

How do providers, practices, and large medical organizations ensure that priceless patient data reaches all the right hands — and none of the wrong ones?

我n addition to laws such as the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act of 1996 (HIPAA) and old-fashioned common sense, the answer is developing effective and secure interoperability solutions.

eClinicalWorks has long been an industry leader in interoperability, and the issuance of new rules by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services underscores the importance of the work we are doing to promote access to medical records.

New rules to guide data sharing

The new rules fulfill provisions of the 21stCentury Cures Act.[1]

  • TheONC Final Ruledes是igned to prevent information blocking and anticompetitive behavior by healthcare providers, healthcare IT providers, Health Information Exchanges, and other information networks.
  • TheCMS Final Rule, effective January 1, 2021, requires health plans that participate in Medicare Advantage, Medicaid, CHIP, and federal healthcare exchanges to share claims data electronically with patients — in secure, understandable, user-friendly ways.
  • The new rules also include requirements governingapplication programming interfaces (APIs), which let patients use smartphones to access their medical records for free.

The eClinicalWorks difference

These new rules are designed to solve one of the most persistent and stubborn problems in healthcare — the existence of so-called data silos. An August 2019studyfrom the Center for Connected Medicine and HIMSS Media found that while 75% of health systems have achieved some level of interoperability, only about 40% of U.S. hospitals and healthcare systems are successfully and fully sharing patient data.

我nteroperability Commonwell.Carequality.Graphic_FB

A leader in interoperability

eClinicalWorks has long been a leader in providing interoperability solutions to our customers, and we continue to take the lead in critical interoperability initiatives, including:

  • Through ourAPI Partnersinitiative, we have supported free patient access to records through third-partyFHIR®apps for more than two years. We areimplementing the Argonaut Project’s FHIR R4 specification to meet requirements for transitioning to the United States Core Data for Interoperability form CCDS (Common Clinical Data Set).
  • eClinicalWorks has been supportingAdmission, Discharge, and Transfer (ADT) notifications through point-to-point connections and regional HIEs. Our teams are now working to support ADT notifications throughboth theCarequalityandCommonWellHealth Alliancenationwide interoperability networks.
  • eClinicalWorks continues to encourage data exchange through numerous modalities and tools, including using ourinteroperability gatewayto connect clinical systems to state and regional HIEs, promotingFHIR APIs,CCDAexchangethrough national networks, andDirect Securemessaging at no or minimal cost. These steps enable ourproviders to freely exchange clinical data and not be labeled as “information blockers.”

Learn more about how interoperability solutions from eClinicalWorks are helping promote safer and more effective medicine.

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[1]Seehttps://www.cms.gov/Regulations-and-Guidance/Guidance/Interoperability/index

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