MAYOR BLOOMBERG AND COMMISSIONER
FRIEDEN UNVEIL STATE-OF-THE-ART ELECTRONIC HEALTH RECORD TECHNOLOGY
Posted: February 25, 2008
Health Department
Innovation Already Improves Care for 200,000 New Yorkers; City
Is on Track to Fulfill Mayor's Pledge to Deliver Lifesaving Technology
to More than One Million Patients by End of Year
New York City's Electronic Health Records Set New Standard for
Health Care Nationwide; Technology Will Help Transform System
of Disease Care into One of Preventing Disease
Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg and Health Commissioner
Dr. Thomas R. Frieden today unveiled the City's next-generation
electronic health records (EHRs), already in use at more than
200 primary-care providers across the city that care for more
than 200,000 New Yorkers. Amidst a growing national debate about
how to fix the health care system, the City is on track to meet
its goal of equipping more than 1,000 local health care providers
- many of them practicing in the city's poorest and sickest
neighborhoods - with secure EHR systems by the end of the year,
benefiting more than a million patients.
This effort will create the nation's largest community-based
EHR network and is a step toward a new kind of health care system
that puts the focus on prevention rather than treatment. The
Mayor and Commissioner Frieden were joined at the announcement
by New York State Health Commissioner Dr. Richard F. Daines,
City Council Member Joel Rivera, and Dr. Sumir Sahgal, a physician
whose Bronx practice has adopted the new technology.
"Electronic health records that put prevention first are a
necessary but not sufficient step to fix our ailing health care
system," said Mayor Bloomberg. "Today's milestone of improved
health care for 200,000 New Yorkers through EHRs puts us well
on our way to delivering this innovative, life-saving technology
to more than one million people in the city by the end of the
year. By bringing this health technology to New Yorkers, we
are building a national model for a health care system that
works, by preventing illness rather than merely treating people
after they're already sick. In Washington, they talk about how
our health care system should be reformed; here in New York
City, we are actually doing it."
"This system gives doctors the right information at the right
time so they can make the right decisions and save lives," said
Commissioner Frieden. "By giving doctors and patients the tools
to better manage conditions such as high blood pressure and
high cholesterol, we can prevent thousands of strokes, heart
attacks and early deaths."
The Health Department's Primary Care Information Project, led
by Assistant Commissioner Dr. Farzad Mostashari, developed the
new electronic health records with the firm eClinicalWorks,
which was selected through a competitive process. The new software
promotes prevention by giving doctors tools that no other commercially
available health record provides. With $30 million, the Health
Department developed the EHRs and offers eligible practices
(primary care providers with over 30% Medicaid and uninsured
patients) a subsidized package of EHR software and services
- including licenses, onsite training, data interfaces, and
two years of maintenance and support. In return, eligible practices
must bear the costs of hardware and network infrastructure and
contribute $4,000 to the Fund for Public Health in New York
for ongoing technical support. The Health Department is also
helping non-eligible practices integrate the new prevention
tools into their own EHRs. The initiative is being supported
by a $3.2 million grant from New York State and evaluated through
$5 million in funding from the Centers of Disease Control and
Prevention and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.
"We congratulate Mayor Bloomberg and Commissioner Frieden on
their Primary Care Information Project," Commissioner Daines
said. "Electronic health records are critical to improving health
care quality and efficiency, and must be aligned with the State's
proposals to link reimbursement to quality outcomes for patients
in order to realize their potential. New York State is also
funding a statewide health information network so that no matter
where a patient is seen in New York, an authorized physician
will have access to that patient's electronic health record.
This represents a breakthrough for patients and doctors."
Electronic Health Records Will Help Revolutionize Care
Designed and used in the right way, secure electronic health
records can help transform health care, just as information
technology has revolutionized other industries in recent years.
Besides improving efficiency and preventing medical errors,
a well-designed electronic health record can help physicians
monitor - and manage - health risks to entire groups of patients.
New York City's new health record guides doctors through routine
medical exams, ensuring that they provide preventive screenings,
prescribe the most effective drugs, offer protective vaccines,
and give smokers the support they need to quit. And by visually
tracking measures such as cholesterol, blood pressure and blood
sugar, the record gives doctors and patients the information
they need to chart progress and maximize health.
The new health record also allows doctors to provide patient-centered
care, and to monitor their own performance to see how well they
are doing at providing good preventive care. This will also
allow insurers and the government to restructure payment systems
to favor high quality preventive care that will help reduce
the need for higher-cost surgeries and treatments that occur
after a patient becomes sick.
The new health record improves the quality of care. Policy
debates typically focus on how to increase access and control
cost - both critical issues - but they often skirt the issue
of how to make health care more effective. Nationally, nine
out of ten people with uncontrolled diabetes or hypertension
already have health insurance, yet they still lack the support
and treatment they need to effectively manage their conditions.
And national studies show that patients receive only half of
the preventive services they need when they visit their doctor.
The City's Health and Hospitals Corporation (HHC)
demonstrated the power of EHRs when it implemented them a decade
ago, winning three national awards over the past five years.
HHC plans to update its EHR system to include decision-support
features of the Health Department's new system, and also integrate
with existing HHC technology.
At the most basic level, electronic health records convert
a paper chart to an electronic one. This reduces paperwork and
helps prevent medical errors. But electronic health records
can also improve people's health by making preventive care the
default setting. The Health Department's prevention-oriented
EHRs improve health care by:
-
Giving doctors the fuller picture of a patient's health
by integrating the patient's medical history, lab results
and current medications into one electronic interface
-
Improving follow-up care by prompting the doctor's front
office to send reminders to patients
-
Increasing preventive screenings, such as mammograms,
colonoscopies and pap smears, by providing automatic reminders
during routine medical exams
-
Reducing the risk of adverse drug reactions by tracking
prescriptions and flagging potential interactions
-
Allowing doctors and patients to track blood pressure
and cholesterol control with simple charts and graphs
-
Ensuring best practices and reducing errors by highlighting
the most effective drug treatments (and doses) when a diagnosis
is made
-
Expediting care by providing instant referral when a
patient needs care
-
Reducing delays in treatment by sending prescriptions
electronically or by fax
-
Tracking medication use and identifying patients who
need more assistance to take their prescribed treatment
-
Tracking quality of preventive care over time, and in
a comparable way between different doctors and different
practices
Article at: nyc.gov
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