GAO: U.S. e-health records still a ways off
But the Veterans Administration has had success with them
September 30, 2005 12:00 PM ETIDG News Service -
The Bush administration gets high marks for its vision in pushing electronic health records, but the U.S. is far from implementing a national health IT system, according to the author of a government report released yesterday.
Although the U.S. could see significant benefits from the expanded use of IT in the healthcare industry, including fewer deaths from medical errors, more work needs to be done to create standards for electronic health records and other health IT initiatives, said David Powner, director of IT management issues at the U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO).
The U.S. government still faces an "enormous challenge" in getting electronic health records to patients, Powner told the U.S. House Committee on Government Reform.
Asked to grade the Bush-created office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology, Powner gave the office an "A" for leadership and vision but an incomplete grade for implementation. In January 2004, Bush called for the U.S. health care industry to embrace electronic health records and make them available to all U.S. residents by 2014.
Powner's report to the committee called on the Bush administration and the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services to push for health IT standards that don't yet exist. "Otherwise, the health care industry will continue to be plagued with incompatible systems that are incapable of exchanging key data that is critical to delivering care and responding to public health emergencies," Powner wrote.
The Bush administration is working on setting standards, said Dr. David Brailer, national coordinator for health IT at the Health and Human Services Department. Next week, Brailer's office will announce a federal government partner to harmonize health IT standards, he said.
In addition to standards, the cost of implementing electronic health records and a lack of technical expertise is holding up adoption at many small health care facilities, Brailer told the committee. While existing research has sent "mixed signals" on the ability of electronic health records to cut costs, health IT can "save lives, improve care and improve efficiency in our health system," he said.
Part of his office's job is to convince health care providers and patients of health IT's benefits, Brailer said. Some health care providers have been slow to adopt electronic health records, he said.
Committee member Jon Porter (R-Nev.) said he plans to introduce legislation in the next couple of weeks that will require electronic health records for people using U.S. government health insurance coverage. With about 9.5 million members on the federal health plan, the requirement would push adoption to
Reprinted with permission from
Story copyright 2009 International Data Group. All rights reserved.
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