Healthcare IT NewsHealthcare IT News
TwitterFacebookLinkedInHealthcareITNews International
  • Home
  • Topics
    • Business Intelligence
    • Claims Processing
    • Data Warehousing
    • EDIS
    • Election 2012
    • Electronic Health Records
    • Enterprise Content Management
    • Enterprise Resource Planning
    • ePrescribing
    • Financial/Revenue Cycle Management
    • Health Information Exchange (HIE)
    • ICD-10
    • Meaningful Use
    • Mobile/Wireless
    • Network Infrastructure
    • Policy and Legislation
    • Privacy and Security
    • Quality and Safety
    • RIS and PACS
    • RTLS
    • Telehealth
    • Workforce Management
  • Issues
    • May 2012
    • April 2012
    • March 2012
    • February 2012
    • January 2012
    • December 2011
  • Blog
  • Webinars
    • Upcoming Webinars
    • On Demand Webinars
  • White Papers
  • Events
  • HIMSS JobMine
  • Press Releases
  • Slideshows
  • Videos
  • Podcasts
  • Supplements
  • Survey Analyses
  • Newsletters
  • Advertise
  • Login
  • Register
  • SUBSCRIBE
    • Newspaper
    • Email Newsletter
Home » News » Electronic Health Records | Privacy and Security
Receive News By Email

  • del.icio.us
  • Digg
  • StumbleUpon
  • Reddit
  • Facebook
  • Google
  • RSS Icon
  

CDC project to test health alerts sent to doctors via EHRs

March 22, 2011 | Molly Merrill, Associate Editor
From the March 2011 print issue

Related Resources

  • Role of Analytics Post Healthcare Reform
  • The Power of Health Analytics: Informed decisions, improved outcomes
  • A Catalyst for Change: How Telemedicine is Transforming the Delivery of Healthcare and Education
  • Solving Urgent Enterprise-wide Integration Challenges while Focusing on the Future
  • Old data learns new tricks: Managing patient security and privacy on a new data sharing playground

ORLANDO, FL – The Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, GE Healthcare and the Alliance of Chicago Community Health Services are collaborating on a project to test the efficacy of actionable health alerts delivered to a physician's electronic medical record.

Officials made the announcement last month at HIMSS11 in Orlando, Fla., saying the project would begin with a six-month study to determine whether the alerts are triggered often enough or too often, and whether doctors take the advice displayed in them.

The study will use GE Healthcare's Medical Quality Improvement Consortium (MQIC) database, which holds more than 17 million de-identified patient records.

The Alliance of Chicago Community Health Services, with participation from the Chicago Department of Public Health, has developed and implemented a use case for the pilot program since 2009.

“There’s a real opportunity here to more seamlessly contribute to – and benefit from – public health surveillance at the point of patient care,” said Fred Rachman, CEO of the alliance. “If this is successful and we’re able to deliver instant, actionable health alerts, we can intervene more rapidly at the individual patient level and more effectively contain communicable outbreaks. This type of rapid dissemination of relevant, up-to-the-minute information to clinicians at the point of care is a model. It demonstrates how public health-oriented clinical decision support could enable us to manage disease more effectively at an earlier stage. It could impact lifespan and quality of life at a global level.”

Mark Dente, the chief medical informatics officer for GE Healthcare IT, explained how the alerts will work.

"When a physician is seeing a patient, she just punches the data in as she normally would,” he said. “The real work happens behind the scenes.”

Once the data is entered, it’s de-identified and transmitted to an archive, where it’s measured against a disease profile and, when a suitable match is found, the relevant alert is issued and appears on the doctor’s EMR display, Dente said.

“Our first use case explores foodborne illness – and CDC estimates there are 48 million cases of it in the U.S. alone each year,” Dente said. “As symptoms are captured by the computer, CDC matches them to patients reporting the same symptoms in a concentrated area – and a public health alert is issued. We could potentially reduce full days off the typical time needed to disseminate a public health alert, potentially saving lives. This is an incredibly exciting effort.”

“The adoption rate for EMR systems is increasing and public health needs to leverage data from these systems,” said Nedra Garrett, director of the CDC’s Division of Informatics Practice, Policy and Coordination. “Providing public health information to providers at the point of care based on presenting symptoms of the patient is a big leap forward.”

Related Topics:
  • March 2011
  • Alliance of Chicago Community Health Services
  • CDC
  • Centers for Disease Control and Prevention
  • Florida
  • GE Healthcare
  • Mark Dente
  • Orlando
  • The Alliance of Chicago
  • Electronic Health Records
  • Privacy and Security

Reader Comments (0)Login to Post a Comment

Most Popular

Latest Headlines
Most Popular
  • 6 reasons physicians need to be on social media
  • Lawsuit seeks Allscripts CEO's removal
  • AMA calls for 2-year extension of ICD-10 deadline
  • Tablet adoption by docs soars
  • FCC to vote on broadband space for patient monitoring
  • Allscripts in skid mode as shares plunge, chairman ousted
  • Lawsuit seeks Allscripts CEO's removal
  • Web First: Q&A with Allscripts CEO Glen Tullman
  • 6 reasons physicians need to be on social media
  • Oregon to implement new statewide HIE
more news

WEBINARS AND WHITE PAPERS

  • WHITE PAPERS
    Mobility Advantage: Health Care Made Easier
  • UPCOMING WEBINARS
    June 5th @ 1PM ET--Get Control of Your Medical Images with a Cloud-Based Vendor-Neutral Archive
  • UPCOMING WEBINARS
    May 23rd @ 2PM ET--Providers’ Perceptions: EMR Impressions & Strategies, Post-Implementation
  • WHITE PAPERS
    Driving Meaningful Use of Enterprise Content Management
  • UPCOMING WEBINARS
    June 6th @ 2PM ET--Healthcare Best Practices: 4 Critical IT Strategies to Avoid Data Breaches
More Resources
Syndicate content

HIMSS JOBMINE

  • Director of Information Systems - Mission Regional Medical Center - Mission, Texas
  • Biostatistician II - Saudi Aramco - Dhahran, Saudi Arabia
  • Chief Information Officer - West Virginia - InfoPartners, Inc. - West Virginia
  • IT Technical Services Director - Genesis HealthCare System - Zanesville, OH
  • VP, CLINICAL INFORMATICS - The Methodist Hospital System - Houston, TX
more jobs

Marketplace

Follow Healthcare IT News on TwitterFan Healthcare IT News on FacebookJoin Healthcare IT News on LinkedInRSS Subscriptions
Digital EditionBlogEvents
JobsMobile SiteMobile App
 
Healthcare Finance News Government Health IT EHRWatch Healthcare Payer News HITECHWatch ICD10Watch mHIMSS PhysBizTech NHINWatch
©2012 MedTech Media Healthcare IT News is a publication of MedTech Media
Subscribe Advertise About Us Privacy Policy