Showing posts with label National Research Council. Show all posts
Showing posts with label National Research Council. Show all posts

Friday, January 16, 2009

Throwing The National Research Council Report On Health IT Under The Bus, Part 1: MedStar Health

I wrote about the just-released National Research Council report on HIT at the post "Current Approaches to Health IT Insufficient ... and Other Master of the Obvious News."

Critiques on the National Research Council report are to be expected. It will likely have a major impact on the HIT industry and those with special interests in that industry. There will be critique, I expect, to a significant degree, unfortunately up to and including in today's political climate ad hominem attacks on its authors, I'm afraid. (I am definitely not implying the latter is the case below, however.)

The following critique, seen at the HISTalk industry-sponsored gossip site here, has me scratching my head a bit.

I'm scratching my head at the following commentary on HIT and the NRC report by an official at MedStar Health, Peter Basch, MD, Medical Director of Ambulatory Clinical Systems.

Points that leave me wanting are as follows:


... in spite of this clear support for funding and continued development of HIT, some media headlines have painted this report as harshly critical of the potential of HIT in general and EHRs in particular. This media misinterpretation resulted primarily from two faults inherent to the report:

(1) the NRC’s mislabeling of their recommendations as a change from what health IT leaders are advocating for; and

(2) the NRC’s inappropriate assignment of blame to EHRs as being the cause of dysfunction rather than their understanding that EHR functionality and implementation deficits are a result of a dysfunctional reimbursement system, which is based on volume of episodic care and verbosity of documentation.


My comments:

Did the NRC mislabel their recommendations for improving HIT as a "change" from what health IT leaders advocate? For example, I haven't heard many industry based health IT leaders advocating for -- or generally supporting with money - studies of interdisciplinary research in biomedical informatics, social science, or healthcare engineering, for example.

In fact, at the
Government Health IT Conference & Exhibition 2008 in Washington, the plenary session leaders and many attendees, including the "experts" from large HIT management consulting organizations, seemed to have little idea what I was talking about when I mentioned the study of social factors. They largely blamed doctors for HIT's ills, until I gave some examples where that was decidedly not the case, and the plenary members then agreed there might be other "unknown" issues at play. Interestingly, the attendees from the VHA knew precisely what I was talking about.

I believe the NRC recommendations are indeed "change we can believe in" compared to the usual and customary HIT industry chatter. I also believe the media reported accurately on the current state and potential of HIT under its current design and management paradigms (note the latter point; I am an HIT advocate, but only if done right.)


Did the NRC "blame" EHR's as the cause of dysfunction, or as a symptom of some deeper issues? The latter seems the case.

Are implementation and functionality deficits a sole result of the reimbursement system? Doubtful, see below regarding HIT in the UK and Australia.
While I agree we have a dysfunctional reimbursement system here in the U.S. that makes quality HIT harder to achieve (my own organization had to sue AllScripts over a malfunctioning E&M module, for example, see civil complaint PDF here), I believe there are far more fundamental issues at play in HIT failure.

Another point made in the HISTalk posting:

... While it is true many early adopter systems believed (at the time) that merely switching off paper medical records to EHRs would lead to improved and safer care , nobody has believed that, or has advocated that position in years

My comments:

"Nobody has advocated EHRs would lead to improved and safer care in years?"
... What about
the statement "To improve the quality of our health care while lowering its costs, we will make the immediate investments necessary to ensure that within five years, all of America's medical records are computerized" by the President-elect on Jan. 8, 2009 as just one example?

That's an ambitious timeline indeed for a technology our National Research Council tells us is not yet ready to provide such benefits without significant rethinking and rework. It certainly send a clear message to the public that HIT in 2009 is a magic bullet, a panacea towards better healthcare quality. It suggests the new administration has absorbed that view through ill informed HIT industry and pundit wishful thinking, and perhaps purposeful disinformation.

I can easily find myriad quotes expressing the same point of view, that EMR ipso facto equals better healthcare quality, on a google search "EMR improves care" or similar search engine query. I think those in informatics should be educating on the dangers in that view, not denying it exists.

A third point in the HISTalk posting:

... The NRC faults current EHR build as not supporting the cognitive support necessary to optimize care. This deficiency is obvious and abundantly clear to veteran EHR and HIT users – many of whom work on their own or with vendors on new and better functioning clinical decision support. However, let’s be fair as to the root cause of this deficiency. It is neither lack of vendor vision nor limitation of IT technology; it is lack of a market.

My comments:

"The root cause" of misdesign of HIT, its glaring deficiencies towards its users' needs after 40+ years of trying, is simply - market forces?

Are any of the sociotechnical ("people and their interactions with technology") issues at my website here or at other sites by those studying social-IT issues and misalignment of the business IT paradigm towards clinical computing relevant? Or, should such issues simply be thrown under the bus since under government stimulus a better market will magically appear?

Is the entire discipline of social informatics (
the study of information and communication technologies in social, cultural and institutional contexts) irrelevant?

What about the problems with the UK's massively government funded national HIT program (see here), and the problems in Australia (see here)? Were the reimbursement system and the market a cause of the problems there? Doubtful. Here's what the UK national program's former leader Richard Granger had to say:

"Sometimes we put in stuff that I'm just ashamed of ... Some of the stuff that Cerner has put in recently is appalling ... Cerner and prime contractor Fujitsu had not listened to end users ... Failed marriages and co-dependency with subcontractors ... A string of problems ranging from missing appointment records, to inability to report on wait times ... Almost a dozen cancelled go-live dates ... Stupid or evil people ... Stockholm syndrome - identifying with suppliers' interests rather than your own ... A little coterie of people out there who are "alleged experts" who were dismissed for reasons of non-performance."

How familiar to Medical Informatics experts that all is.

In summary, are the market and the reimbursement system the major causes of HIT's disappointing track record as claimed in the critique? Hardly.

Perhaps there are other far more fundamental "root causes" for HIT dysfunction that this critique of the NRC report is leaving out, including the issues above as well as additional factors mentioned in my posting here.

We as clinicians, especially those who are biomedical informatics professionals, cannot improve the situation by making ill informed, wishy-washy excuses for the HIT vendors. While the latter, as in pharma, might treat us, as well as CIO's and IT hospital personnel to nice perks, promote us in speaking engagements as key opinion leaders (KOL's), give grants, etc., they have produced mediocre to very poor products for the most part for decades. This wastes resources that healthcare can ill afford, ultimately harms or at best does not help patients, and needless to say makes reports such as the NRC report and Joint Commission Sentinel Event Alert necessary.

I am aghast at the stories I hear even today of HIT products such as EHR's and CPOE's with cryptic user interaction design
that inundate, confound and insult clinicians, force clinicians to "drink information from a firehose", or have other issues that waste time and create new opportunities for error.

To be quite frank, the IT industry spends exponentially more time and expense on design and debate over trivial and arcane features in computer operating systems (to ensure a "better user experience", the fluffy marketing-ish industry buzzword du jour for what used to be called "efficient interaction") than on HIT.

As in medicine itself, we cannot cure this situation by failing to recognize or by ignoring the symptoms, signs and features which are right before our eyes.

Ironic note - While
I do not know the author of the critique, a few of the case studies of HIT dysfunction and difficulty at the above referenced sociotechnical issues website here involved a high level person now at MedStar. I can assure readers that the issues then had nothing to do with "reimbursement" and "lack of a market" and very much to do with "lack of vendor vision" as well as "lack of hospital management and IS department vision" in the prior organization.

-- SS

Saturday, January 10, 2009

National Research Council: Current Approaches to Health IT Insufficient ... and Other "Master of the Obvious" News

The National Research Council has issued a remarkable press release about a new report on HIT. The press release is at this link:

Current Approaches to U.S. Health Care Information Technology are Insufficient

(Jan 12 addendum: a prepublication pdf of the report itself is here.)

I reproduce the press release below, but please do read my polemic before reviewing it.

My early mentor, cardiothoracic surgery pioneer Victor P. Satinsky, M.D., used to become irritated when people or organizations presented views that qualified them as "Masters of the Obvious." I believe the following release by the highest scientific authorities in the land qualifies for such a categorization.

Sadly, the release by the National Research Council outlines the "what" (what is wrong), but not the "why." Perhaps that will be found in the full report, although many of the "whys" (that is, why these health IT problems exist at all, and why the Joint Commission and NRC reports are even necessary, after 40+ years of Biomedical Informatics, IT-sociology and other research) can be found right here on Healthcare Renewal.

On the positive side for clinicians, life as a typical hospital CIO or other non-medical executive may have just become substantially more aligned towards serving the needs of clinicians, via being compelled by this report and its aftermath to make major changes in the way HIT is pursued. These changes would replace the familiar pursuit of building self-serving IT empires.

In fact, if you're a CIO who is accustomed to doing typical deals with HIT vendors, hires typical business IT staff unknowledgeable and untried in anything medical to work in clinical IT, along with lots of ham-fisted but hats-in-hand consultants who then try to clean up the mess the IT staff make, and who bullies and brands with a scarlet letter anyone who challenges the status quo (such as Medical Informaticists and other cross-disciplinary specialists who actually know what they're doing in HIT) while the latter actually try to protect the "customers" also known as "patients", your life has just become a bit more challenging.

I'd thought the December 2008 Joint Commission Sentinel Event Alert on Health IT, on the risks posed by improperly designed and implemented Health IT had been a one-up. I thought it might have been a fluke, written and released by some young disgruntled employee like Justen Deal who would be fired. I thought the Joint Commission Alert would be ignored by the players in the highly lucrative and often exploitative (of clinician ignorance and learned helplessness, that is) HIT ecosystem.

I may have been mistaken. The NRC report may change that.

Significantly, the NRC report was about a number of the best medical organizations in this country, not about the smaller less experienced hospitals where things are far worse.

Finally, the report is not news to me, others who objectively observe HIT (especially those without financial or other conflicts of interest), or to readers of this blog. In the words of abducted-by-aliens, ignored-by-the-experts pilot Russell Casse after several cities are destroyed by the aliens:


"I've been sayin' it, I've been sayin' it, ain't I been sayin' it?"


Read the whole Press Release below.

Perhaps we as a profession should feel for patients who were denied care due to lack of funds while the IT industry diverted capital out of healthcare for "insufficient" HIT, or were denied good care through malfunctioning HIT or non-functioning HIT, or who suffered outcomes that good HIT could have prevented (i.e., the cost of lost opportunity - my own father died from malpractice as a result of informational confusion a good EHR might have prevented). All while the society's gatekeepers ignored the Distant Early Warning Line of the HIT pioneers that all was not well. (Anyone know of other sectors that crashed this past year where such warnings were ignored?)

The Press Release should be read in its entirety. I will not comment on it here further, other than to say that HC Renewal can be searched on the term "Medical Informatics", "EMR" or similar for much more material on these issues.

Emphases in boldface are mine.

The National Academies

Date: Jan. 9, 2009


FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE


CURRENT APPROACHES TO U.S. HEALTH CARE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY ARE INSUFFICIENT


WASHINGTON
-- Current efforts aimed at the nationwide deployment of health care information technology (IT) will not be sufficient to achieve medical leaders' vision of health care in the 21st century and may even set back the cause, says a new report from the National Research Council. The report, based partially on site visits to eight U.S. medical centers considered leaders in the field of health care IT, concludes that greater emphasis should be placed on information technology that provides health care workers and patients with cognitive support, such as assistance in decision-making and problem-solving.


In 2001, the Institute of Medicine -- which with the Research Council, National Academy of Sciences, and National Academy of Engineering make up the National Academies -- laid out a vision of 21st century health care that involves care which is safe, effective, patient-centered, timely, efficient, and equitable. Many aspects of this vision involve information technology, such as having access to comprehensive data on patients, tools to integrate evidence into practice, and the ability to highlight problems as they arise. To see how leaders in U.S. health care use computing and information management in providing care, the committee that wrote the new report visited eight medical centers -- University of Pittsburgh Medical Center; Veterans Affairs Medical Center in Washington, D.C.; HCA TriStar and the Vanderbilt University Medical Center, both in Nashville, Tenn.; Partners HealthCare System in Boston; Intermountain Healthcare in Salt Lake City; University of California-San Francisco Medical Center; and Palo Alto Medical Foundation in California.


Although the institutions showed a strong commitment to delivering quality health care, the IT systems seen by the committee fall short of what will be needed to realize IOM's vision. The report describes difficulties with data sharing and integration, deployment of new IT capabilities, and large-scale data management. Most importantly, current health care IT systems offer little cognitive support; clinicians spend a great deal of time sifting through large amounts of raw data (such as lab and other test results) and integrating it with their medical knowledge to form a whole picture of the patient. Many care providers told the committee that data entered into their IT systems was used mainly to comply with regulations or to defend against lawsuits, rather than to improve care. As a result, valuable time and energy is spent managing data as opposed to understanding the patient.


Ideally, IT systems would place raw data into context with current medical knowledge to provide clinicians with computer models, "virtual patients," that depict the health status of the patient, including information on how different organ systems are interacting, epidemiological insight into the local prevalence of disease, and potential patient-specific treatment regimens. Although health care workers could still have access to the raw data if they needed it, clinicians would be able to work with models without drowning in data. This cognitive support would help clinicians more efficiently and effectively determine a course of action through improved understanding of a patient's status, says the report.

The report identifies several principles for improving health care IT. In the short term, government, health care providers, and health care IT vendors should embrace measurable improvements in quality of care as the driving rationale for adopting health care IT, and should avoid programs that focus on adoption of specific clinical applications. In the long term, success will depend upon accelerating interdisciplinary research in biomedical informatics, computer science, social science, and health care engineering.


This report was sponsored by the U.S. National Library of Medicine, National Institutes of Health, U.S. National Science Foundation, Partners HealthCare System, Vanderbilt University Medical Center , the Commonwealth Fund, and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The National Academy of Sciences, National Academy of Engineering, Institute of Medicine , and National Research Council are private, nonprofit institutions that provide science, technology, and health policy advice under a congressional charter. The Research Council is the principal operating agency of the National Academy of Sciences and the National Academy of Engineering. A committee roster follows.


Copies of COMPUTATIONAL TECHNOLOGY FOR EFFECTIVE HEALTH CARE: IMMEDIATE STEPS AND STRATEGIC DIRECTIONS are available from the National Academies Press; tel. 202-334-3313 or 1-800-624-6242 or on the Internet at
HTTP://WWW.NAP.EDU. Reporters may obtain a copy from the Office of News and Public Information (contacts listed above).


# # #


[ This news release and report are available at
HTTP://NATIONAL-ACADEMIES.ORG ]



NATIONAL RESEARCH COUNCIL
Division on Engineering and Physical Sciences
Computer Science and Telecommunications Board


COMMITTEE ON ENGAGING THE COMPUTER SCIENCE RESEARCH COMMUNITY IN HEALTH CARE INFORMATICS


WILLIAM W. STEAD 1 (CHAIR)
McKesson Foundation Professor of Medicine and Biomedical
Informatics, and
Associate Vice Chancellor for Strategy and Transformation
Vanderbilt University
Nashville , Tenn.


G. OCTO BARNETT 1
Professor of Medicine
Harvard Medical School
, and
Senior Scientific Director
Laboratory of Computer Science
Massachusetts General Hospital
Boston


SUSAN B. DAVIDSON
Weiss Professor and Chair
Computer and Information Science
University of Pennsylvania
Philadelphia


ERIC DISHMAN
General Manager and Global Director
Intel Corp.
Hillsboro , Ore.


DEBORAH L. ESTRIN
Professor of Computer Science, and
Director
Center for Embedded Networked Sensing
Department of Computer Science
University of California
Los Angeles


ALON HALEVY
Research Scientist
Department of Engineering
Google Inc.
Seattle


DONALD A. NORMAN
Co-Founder
Neilsen Norman Group
Northbrook , Ill.


IDA SIM
Associate Professor of Medicine
Department of Medicine
School of Medicine
University of California
San Francisco


ALFRED Z. SPECTOR 2
Vice President of Research and Special Initiatives
Google Inc.
New York City


PETER SZOLOVITS 1
Head
Clinical Decision-Making Group
Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory, and
Professor of Computer Science and Engineering
Massachusetts Institute of Technology
Cambridge


ANDRIES VAN DAM 2
University Professor of Technology and Education and
Professor of Computer Science
Brown University
Providence , R.I.


GIO WIEDERHOLD
Professor Emeritus
Department of Computer Science
Stanford University
Stanford , Calif.


RESEARCH COUNCIL STAFF


HERB LIN
Study Director


1 Member, Institute of Medicine
2 Member, National Academy of Engineering

Supplementary points: sometimes saying "I told you so" to those who place the scarlet letters upon those not afflicted with HIT irrational exuberance is appropriate. This is one of those times.

To patients harmed or killed by the clouded vision and/or conflicts of interest of the pundits, I hereby apologize for the learned helplessness of the healthcare community in not taking charge of this situation sooner.

-- SS