Study for 1 covering chapters 1 – 3 will post on Monday. Make sure that you study before you begin this . It is timed and designed to gauge how much information that you have retained from this course (readings and presentation). This is NOT an open note, book, or any other resource. Chapter 1: Health Information Systems Fundamentals
Introduction
HIS fundamentals
Ideas, methods, practices, and principles necessary to build more advanced, elegant, complex initiatives and capabilities
Fundamentals are important
Key skills, training, methods, standards, and principles must guide the planning, design, testing, implementation, maintenance, and enhancement of HIS
HIS Fundamentals
HIS Strategic Planning
The HIS Strategic Plan aligns the HIS and technologies to strategic business directions and initiatives
Supports and enables the strategies to be accomplished
Produces actionable, balanced portfolio of systems that support and enable clinical, business and administrative, and connectivity needs of the organization
Covered in Chapters 2, 3, and 4
HIS Fundamentals
Governance
Use of consistent management methods, policies, decision rights, and processes across all units and departments
Structural methods: steering committees, standards, auditability, consistent policies and processes
Culture of ethics, integrity, and personal accountability
HIS Fundamentals
Managing HIS
Techniques and activities deployed to achieve HIS goals and objectives
Methods include generally accepted methods and standards for planning, implementing, supporting, and managing core HIS
Activities involve the IT Department (information services, information resources, technology, and information systems)
HIS Fundamentals
Managing HIS, cont.
Plan and manage HIS and infrastructure, data, analytics, people, implement systems/manage change, train tech staff and end users, and more
One of the most essential functional areas of a HC organization
Expenditures comprise significant portion of the organization’s capital and operating budgets
Warrants attention from highest levels of the organization
HIS Fundamentals
HIS Planning and Budgeting
Uses organization’s strategic business plan as a guide
Should reflect exactly the forward movement and enablement of the organization toward its business and clinical strategies
Annual or near-term plans and budgets are established based on 5- to 10- to 15-year view of the HIS Strategies Plans
Annual plans drive the annual HIS capital and operating budgets
HIS Fundamentals
HIS Planning and Budgeting, cont.
HIS plans and budgets must include everything needed and feasible to accomplish in the coming fiscal year
Agenda for each year is planning in concert with strategic and operational needs of the organization
Plans and budgets must stay in exact tune with the HIS Strategic Plan
Deviations are dangerous
HIS Fundamentals
HIS Selection
Process by which decisions are made about which new software systems to bring into the organization
Methodologies are widely known, repeatable processes
Must justify why a new system is best rather than using something that already exists in the HIS portfolio
HIS Steering Committee oversees the process
HIS Fundamentals
Implementing HIS
Set of activities that results in software system going from a business plan to a fully utilized HIS
Requires a disciplined methodology that drives a carefully executed, highly detailed project plan
Requires activating new software, training for end users, transition from the old system to the new
Also involves testing and evaluating the new system to make sure it functions as designed
HIS Fundamentals
Managing Change
The reality of what happens with a new HIS
Work with interdisciplinary teams on design, requirements, training, testing, activation, and use
Closely collaborate with end users, management, clinical staff
Keep others not involved in the process in the loop
HIS Fundamentals
Managing Vendors
Organizations rely heavily on external companies who produce, deliver, and support HIS software, hardware, and services
For-profit corporations that exist to create value for shareholders or returns for their owners and investors
Covered in Chapters 5 and 7
HIS Fundamentals
Harvesting the Yield from HIS
Magnitude of the work often prevents an organization from taking full advantage of the data and information resources it is creating
HIS produces and captures data resources to create new knowledge through analytics, business intelligence, and clinical intelligence
Increases the value and ROI in the core HIS
Value garnered is widely underachieved
Covered in Chapters 10 and 11
HIS Fundamentals
Business, Clinical, and Artificial Intelligence
Business intelligence, clinical intelligence, and artificial intelligence systems provide analytical systems, resources, data management, and personnel capabilities
Allows organization to gain insights and knowledge
Allows them to apply knowledge and insights to improve processes and outcomes
Covered in Chapter 11
HIS Fundamentals
Data Management and Stewardship
To gain yield and value from data, they must be carefully and continuously tended
Definition of each data element must be accurate and consistent in its use
Must be managed according to the goals of the organization
Consistency, accuracy, accessibility, and safety must be checked regularly
HIS Fundamentals
Creating New Knowledge
Health care is a function of information and knowledge workers coming together to help patients, healthcare organizations, patient populations, and communities
Needs of patients evolve
Healthcare organizations must adapt
Must be data driven to put new knowledge into practice
Organizational culture must embrace adaptation and thirst for new knowledge
HIS Fundamentals
HIS Regulatory Compliance and Risk Management
Actions, systems, policies, and management techniques used to accomplish these initiatives must be done in compliance with HC regulations
HIPAA, MACRA, CMS, MIPS, APMs, DHS regulations, Joint Commission
Health care is highly regulated because it is paid for by government/third-party insurance; fraud comprises ~10% of healthcare costs; and patient safety, data, and privacy must be protected
HIS Fundamentals
HIS Security
Security of HIS, data, and protected health information (PIH) is a primary goal in healthcare
Hackers, black market, and ransomware experts threaten HIS
Prevention is among the highest priorities for any HIS agenda
HIS Fundamentals
HIS Standards
HIS technical and data standards must be in place to communicate across providers, insurers, and users of HC
Common protocols and terminology
Proprietary software systems strategically withhold opportunity and flexibility for healthcare organizations to use different vendor products simultaneously
Case Example: Common Fundamental Failures
Background
The challenges needing a solution
The solution
HIS Fundamentals
HIS Model for the Health Professions
HIS Terminology
Health Information Systems (HIS)
Technology Infrastructure
Hardware
Software
Middleware
Networks
End-users
“user interface”
HIS Terminology
Roles
HIS planning
HIS governance
HIS management
Design
HIS development
Activation/implementation
Ongoing maintenance
Communication
Vendor and Provider Relations
HIS development began in the 1960s
Beginnings were local, humble, and rooted in data processing departments of hospitals
There was no Internet to connect capabilities
Unintended consequences of new technology:
Collision of business interests of wealthy publicly traded or private vendor corporations vs. health provider, community, and patient interests
Vendor marketplace is dynamic
Covered in Chapter 8
History of HIS
The Early Days
HIS followed the advent of computerization of U.S. society in general
1960s: Early software applications focused on accounting and financial applications
”Data” of finance and accounting involved dollars and cents (standardized and universally understood data elements)
1970s: Early HIS and tech vendors (SMS, now Cerner)
History of HIS
The Early Days, cont.
Hospitals began to develop their own software
Gave rise to first HIS professional organizations (HISSG, ECHO)
Members “shared”/exchanged software programs and applications
ECHO for IBM hardware, HISSG for non-IBM
First HIS were extensions of charge-capture systems for patient billing
First comprehensive system was created by Lockheed Martin (Technicon)
History of HIS
The Early Days, cont.
SAIC created early clinical information system for VA hospitals
1980s: Minicomputer (H-P, Digital Equipment Corporation, IBM)
More efficient, less expensive, fewer people needed to operate
Many early software systems sold by vendors were originally developed in hospital DP departments
History of HIS
Evolution of Clinical Systems and the EHR
First-generation HIS clinical order entry systems were extensions of charge-capture systems for patient billing
Initial clinical systems included “order entry” systems, early versions of computerized provider order entry (CPOE)
Software was modeled after hotel software
Through the 1990s, advent of the Internet transformed healthcare computing
History of HIS
The current climate
Watershed To Err Is Human HDM report drove desire to improve quality and efficiency of care
HIS and technology are essential tools in that process
Government legislation: Title XIII
Challenge: Change from fee-for-service reimbursement methodology to value-based reimbursement system
Reliance on vendor marketplace increases cost of automation
Prevention, wellness, chronic care, and care coordination are replacing acute-care model
Summary
The task for health professionals is to provide the education and support needed to create the kinds of HIS we need in today’s challenging and changing healthcare environment
Clinical, business, and technology health professions now can only be done proficiently with HIS knowledge, ability, and activity
Reliance on vendors and change from acute, medical, sickness-based, institutional scenario to new model based on prevention, wellness, chronic care management, and care coordination create HIS challenges
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