On mySimon: Robert Rodriguez Studded-Band Skirt
BNET Business Network:
BNET
TechRepublic
ZDNet

November 11th, 2009

CCHIT going on almost as if nothing happened

Posted by Dana Blankenhorn @ 8:53 am

Categories: General, Hospital IT, IT Management, Medical IT, Medical Office IT, Medical Records, Physician Information, U.S.

Tags: U.S. Department Of Health And Human Services, Electronic Health Record, Health Care, Standards, CCHIT, Blumenthal, E-health, Quality, Healthcare, Vertical Industries

One of the big controversies early this year was over the role CCHIT was playing, certifying vendors to sell Electronic Health Record (EHR) software.

CCHIT (Certification Commission for Health Information Technology) was formed in 2004 out of HIMSS (Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society), an industry group, and began certifying EHR systems in 2006. Until this year you entered the EHR market by first undergoing CCHIT certification.

Was their approach right, or was it too rigid? Was it really helping buyers, or just pointing them toward expensive solutions from members of the HIMSS industry group?

When we last left the story the good guys seemed to have won. The standards under which software will be approved for stimulus cash are functional, requiring meaningful use. They’re not programmatic. It’s not what the software does, but whether it’s used, and for what, that counts.

So what happened to CCHIT? They’re going along pretty much as before.

In an extended interview with Healthcare Informatics, CCHIT head Mark Leavitt (above) said the group has added a new Preliminary ARRA 2011 Certification to its suite of products.

“It doesn’t really matter” what the National Coordinator of Health IT, David Blumenthal, or his policy committee come up with, Leavitt told Anthony Guerra.  CCHIT’s “Get Certified” seminar in October drew an overflow crowd.

Blumenthal’s policy committee called its government standard “HHS certification.” Leavitt called the same set of criteria “Preliminary ARRA Certification” because the Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) may give it yet-another name, and because the rules on all this don’t go out until next month in any case.

Even after that there will be time for CCHIT and others to comment, and for those comments to be digested, before they are final. Then certifying authorities must be appointed, and CCHIT has applied to be one. Meanwhile hospitals and doctors are having to make decisions that may haunt them through their professional lifetimes.

In his interview, Leavitt called the ARRA rules “basic” and his own rules “comprehensive,” but in fact one is the government standard and the other CCHIT’s private one.

What has happened is that CCHIT has been forced to take a step back, from being the gatekeeper of market entry to being one of perhaps several groups looking to be certification authorities under the new rules.

This is not Leavitt’s spin on the matter:

We’ve heard from provider groups, we’ve heard from the specialties that the marketplace was not making adequate progress in making the products they needed with all the features they needed.

There’s more than just federal standards, there are other requirements they have as providers, such as supporting workflows and maintaining a legally adequate record. They really thought CCHIT was a way to have a community conversation and move the entire marketplace forward.

We’re not a gatekeeper. We’re a community conversation. The CCHIT “comprehensive” standards aren’t for the  “sophisticated CIO,” in Leavitt’s words, but for small hospitals, for small practices, the people who need help in making an informed choice.

Maybe, but these same customers also have the most constrained budgets, and fairly basic needs. Do they need something a private industry group has deemed meets “comprehensive” standards or not?

That is a question the market will have to decide. Will hospital administrators and practice managers insist on the comprehensive CCHIT-approved label, or will they accept any solution that brings them that sweet, sweet stimulus cash?

Dana BlankenhornDana Blankenhorn has been a business journalist since 1978, and has covered technology since 1982. He launched the Interactive Age Daily, the first daily coverage of the Internet to launch with a magazine, in September 1994. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.

Email Dana Blankenhorn

Subscribe to ZDNet Healthcare via Email alerts or RSS.

  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 8 Talkback(s)
base requirements
"We firmly believe the feds will follow CCHIT for at least the base requirements."

No problems with that. It's just that far more is needed to ensure HIT efficacy, safety, reasonable user cent... (Read the rest)
Posted by: scotsilv Posted on: 11/18/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
CCHIT Happens  sunflier | 11/11/09
Republicans up to no good again.  PeopleFirst | 11/11/09
This story contained no politics  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 11/11/09
We bought a package that was CCHIT certified, one of our requirements.  Been_Done_Before | 11/11/09
Thanks for the note  DanaBlankenhornZDNet Moderator | 11/11/09
base requirements  scotsilv | 11/18/09
Competition Is Good, Might Not Help in Short Term  John Bader | 11/11/09
RE: CCHIT going on almost as if nothing happened  e-Patient Dave | 11/11/09

What do you think?

SponsoredWhite Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

advertisement

Recent Entries

advertisement

Archives

Favorite Links

ZDNet Blogs

White Papers, Webcasts, and Downloads

Enterprise Applications

  • Check out some of the easiest and most powerful ways to boost productivity while saving money on your application infrastructure. See ZDNet's comprehensive Enterprise Application resource center, now!
  • New Online Dashboard
  • Read about top issues IT decision-makers face every day, plus get cost effective solutions to real life IT problems. Oracle Topline