HHS announces initiative to stimulate adoption of EHRs in minority communities

The Department of Health and Human Services’ (HHS) Office of Minority Health and Quest Diagnostics, based in Madison, N.J., announced on Wednesday a program through which Quest Diagnostics will donate electronic health record (EHR) software and services to physicians in small practices serving minority populations in Houston, Texas.

The initiative is intended to foster broader adoption and use of EHRs and support national efforts to reduce health disparities affecting minorities, according to HHS.

Quest Diagnostics and its subsidiary, MedPlus, will donate approximately 75 EHR licenses, including subscription fees, for 12 months and will help integrate the necessary information technology components within participating physician practices, HHS announced.

Quest will collaborate with the federally-funded Regional Extension Center (REC) at the University of Texas Health Science Center at Houston on staff education and training. RECs are funded under the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, part of the Recovery Act of 2009.

[See also: RECs target providers in rural, underserved areas.]

"The Office of Minority Health is pleased to support this coordinated effort to show how electronic health records can be used by minority-serving physicians," said Deputy Assistant Secretary for Minority Health Garth N. Graham, MD. "We applaud Quest Diagnostic’s support of the department’s efforts to reduce health disparities, and hope this initiative will stimulate more efforts to extend the use of EHRs, especially in smaller practices and underserved communities that face special challenges in acquiring or implementing this technology."

    

Data from the 2005-2006 National Ambulatory Medical Care Survey and National Hospital Ambulatory Medicare Care Survey show that EHR adoption is lower among providers serving Hispanic patients who are uninsured or rely on Medicaid, and is lower among providers serving uninsured, non-Hispanic black patients than among providers serving privately insured, non-Hispanic white patients.

"Quest Diagnostics strongly believes that equal access to electronic health record technology is a critical component in improving wellness and delivering better health outcomes,” said Jon R. Cohen, MD, senior vice president and chief medical officer, Quest Diagnostics. "We are pleased to join with HHS in this important initiative to make this advanced technology more available to underserved communities.”           

Quest Diagnostics and MedPlus will donate approximately 85 percent of the cost of health provider EHR licenses, program integration, monthly subscription fees, and education and training, according to Cohen. Since 2006, an exception to the Federal Stark Law and Anti-Kickback Statute has permitted donation of certain EHR arrangements but requires recipients to pay 15 percent of donor costs.

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