Volume II, Issue 41
Oct. 12, 2015
Getting the Diagnosis Wrong
WH
Danielle Ofri, MD, in a 10.8.15 NY Times post, writes:
 
Diagnostic accuracy is fiendishly difficult to measure precisely, but it is estimated that doctors get it wrong in one out of 10 to one out of 20 cases. The Institute of Medicine has taken up the subject, and its new report offers the chilling observation that nearly everyone will experience at least one diagnostic error in their lifetimes.
 
WIM
Healthcare is as much an art as a science. This illustrates that everyone should choose their doctor carefully and not just accept their HMO assigned physician.
Docs Accuses of Using EHR to Steal Patients 
WH 
Susan D. Hall, FierceHealthIT in a 10.8.15 post, reports:
 
Valley Children's Hospital in Madera, California, has filed a suit against three pediatric lung specialists, claiming they wrongfully accessed patient records in order to lure them away.
 
The lawsuit names John Moua, MD, David Lee, MD, Paul Do, MD, and two medical groups-- University Pediatric Specialists and Central California Faculty Medical Group.
 
Records of at least 164 patients were accessed by the doctors while they were working at Valley Children's, Michael Goldring, interim Chief Legal Officer and Administrative Officer, told The Fresno Bee. He called the access "a significant data breach" and a HIPAA violation.
 
WIM
Inevitable. Medical practice is, after all, a business. The lifeblood of any business is customers (patients). Business men and women have been stealing customers for a long time.
HHS Issues Rules to Advance EHR with Added Simplicity and Flexibility 
WH
In an HHS.gov press release dated 10.6.15:
 
The Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS) and Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) today released final rules that simplify requirements and add new flexibilities for providers to make electronic health information available when and where it matters most and for health care providers and consumers to be able to readily, safely, and securely exchange that information. The final rule for 2015 Edition Health IT Certification Criteria (2015 Edition) and final rule with comment period for the Medicare and Medicaid Electronic Health Records (EHRs) Incentive Programs will help continue to move the health care industry away from a paper-based system, where a doctor's handwriting needed to be interpreted and patient files could be misplaced.
 
WIM
"We have a shared goal of electronic health records helping physicians, clinicians, and hospitals to deliver better care, smarter spending, and healthier people. We eliminated unnecessary requirements, simplified and increased flexibility for those that remain, and focused on interoperability, information exchange, and patient engagement. By 2018, these rules move us beyond the staged approach of 'meaningful use' and focus on broader delivery system reform," said Dr. Patrick Conway, MD, M.Sc., CMS Deputy Administrator for Innovation and Quality and Chief Medical Officer. "Most importantly we are seeking additional public comments and plan for active engagement of stakeholders so we take time to get broad input on how to improve these programs over time."

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Florida Health Industry Week in Review is published every Monday by FHIcommunications

Each Monday morning we share the top healthcare headlines of the previous week and summarize What Happened (WH) and Why It Matters (WIM).

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