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Yes, yes, I know this question elicits strong opinion on both sides of the debate. I'm actually not inviting a CCHIT response.
CCHIT polarises any EMR community into those vehemently against government control versus those who favor standards and the clarity that those standards might provide, or not as the case maybe. No question, this is an important debate which will continue as long as there are posters prepared to state and defend their positions.
We have some notable, vociferous and energetic EMR/u posters on both sides of this debate. I know all of these posters have genuine (or at least a grudging) respect for each other and they appreciate the chance to promote their view and values. It doesn't take a genius to work out why we have two camps; the EMR vendor who can afford CCHIT certification versus the vendor and Doctor who cannot afford a CCHIT-based product, and those in-between.
It would be pretty boring if there was no one brave enough to enter our discussions. You do know there are lurkers on this forum who -- can't say I blame them -- who are nervous about entering into the discussions because they fear injury, flame or ridicule. It can get pretty robust in here sometimes. Now that's losing a chunk of comment that could be valuable. Maybe if folks were a little nicer, a little more respecting of a forum thread, a visiting poster, a perspective, that wouldn't be such a bad thing?
Just for a moment, consider how difficult it is trying to moderate any of these discussions where we have such polarization and strong opinion. A moderator is by nature always wrong in someone's eyes, and yes, we have feelings too and a limited supply of Prozac. You should count yourself lucky. No one has asked you to moderate here.
Nick Harrington email me or Skype: nickharrington emrupdate.comIf I have seen further it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants" Sir Isaac Newton 1676
Thanks, Nick.
It is very frustrating when a thread is about one thing and then we all end up on the same old soap boxes. If we stay on topic I believe we can be of great assistance to the EMR Lurker Community that turns to this one of just a few sources on EMR/EHR with a long history.
Brendon: Thanks, Nick. It is very frustrating when a thread is about one thing and then we all end up on the same old soap boxes. If we stay on topic I believe we can be of great assistance to the EMR Lurker Community that turns to this one of just a few sources on EMR/EHR with a long history.
I think Brendon has it right.
BTW Nick, as usual I prefer Lewis Carroll
Always speak the truth, think before you speak, and write it down afterwards (the Red Queen)
Why is it that the only ones it seems that I've seen of late that are neutral or pro-CCHIT are just high end vendors?
Al Borges, M.D.
Nick Harrington: Just for a moment, consider how difficult it is trying to moderate any of these discussions where we have such polarization and strong opinion. A moderator is by nature always wrong in someone's eyes, and yes, we have feelings too and a limited supply of Prozac. You should count yourself lucky. No one has asked you to moderate here.
Nick, thanks for your usual fairness and clear thinking. Although I made a bloody mess of things yesterday, I did learn something: when lots of doctors band together against you, you know you did something wrong!
Robert Gleeman, Medical Journalist for EMR Update.com Email: robert@emrupdate.com Tel: 1-650-968-6359 Skype and ooVoo user name: robertgleeman EMR progress is a matter of fact. EMR Update supports your right to know.
Now see these young doctors- I don't know which EMR they will get, but if they happen to get $40,000 EMRs their loan goes up by that much.
http://money.cnn.com/2007/11/16/pf/young_doctors.moneymag/index.htm?cnn=yes
Does anyone know about that Dr.Notes EMR that was CCHIT certified ? \
Try this google, [link in new window] who's #3 !
email:
Great article, Joseph! The dude in the article was stupid, though, to pass up the $9000 a year state medical school for the $29000 a year osteopathic school. Dumb move. I don't understand why the couple didn't join the Reserves- you give the Army a year, and they will pay for a year of schooling. It's not a bad deal if you stand to owe a lot of money.
I went to a "state school" in Richmond, VA which cost me $9000 (including room and board). They even paid for some of my vacations, since as "secretary" of the AMSA (American Medical Student Asso chapter) I got to go to meetings in other states,
Next thing you'll know, this budding anesthesiologist will be buying up a "big boy" EHR. Heck, why not? What's $700000 vs $740000 in the hole? I know those types- they like to spend money like crazy all the way up to bankruptcy.
Jason- there is no way that Dr. Notes was ever CCHIT certified, but I'm sure that they could have passed had they ponied up that $28000 a year!
Dr. Notes went out of business.
Acermed is the staple for what CCHIT means to financial viability. If you have the buy in and the features can be presented in a one day review, you get certified. The solution can be entirely vaporware and screen shots, but if it is seen as finished and in the current release, it is certified.
Acermed proved that CCHIT has a long way to go in proving companies really do what they passed to do. This is where this Acermed case really dissapointed me, as it proved the one company that is alledgedly certifying functionality of a particular version actually failed to do so.
In any case it is the only such organization and hopefully they improve on this disaster.
That being said, I think you are off base to say all CCHIT products are changing new office startup costs from $70,000 to $740,000. Lets see two of the people on the list is eMds and eClinicalworks for 2007 and going on. There are 10 certified vendors and two of them I know for sure charge around $10,000 for one physician and $7,500 for each additional physician. I hardly can see you extrapulating $100K plus from this, and definetely not a $500,000.
See not all EMR/EHR certified are 30K per physician, but some are. Your analysis are false and the facts don't bare out.
I understand your hatred for CCHIT and Mark Leavitt. I am not a big fan either, because of the structure and costs. I believe that the process should be free or low cost and provided by the Government, not a quasi-private/government organization.
But you cannot make a argument of cost, you have to use something else. Unless of course you think everyone should give away software for free. I don't see where taking away profit and free enterprise would benefit innovation and the end user. I don't think you would be speaking for all Physicians/Consumers if you stated that the profit motivation and innovation should be taken out of EMR/EHR software.
This would be terrible for the industry. For example, our eMedRec would not exist. I am not developing software for our end users out of the kindness of my heart. I am doing it so that I can feed my employees and earn a living to pay my bills and grow my company. I am working hard to keep our consumers happy, that is the American Way. If you want it free, go to Cuba. You can get it free, but hardly can you get it improved on, since there is no motivation to do anything profitable.
Unless you are going for the cigars, no need to go to cuba, just drop by Boston in March.
I don't fully understand the issue with CCHIT (not being a doc explains a lot) - my question is - how does it differ from HL7 in that it may be led by major industry players but there is a common good to all speaking the same language. Except it is not systems speaking it is docs expecting a minimum set of features from a system.
At *least* the features, test cases and certification process is open - I think that is rather progressive and lets me into the game.
For me it gives me something to shoot at, and sure it will not certify code quality nor business owner savy (how could it) but at least it helps show that Open Source can be in the same ballpark as a commercial system (way to go Vista).
Of course perhaps I am being optmistic that I can persuade them to certify me for free (or all the spare change in my wallet). But even if they don't I will simply show online how my system meets every criteria (as could anyone needing to save the 24k) - so I get certified or virtually certified (maybe that is Al's premise).
Disclaimer - I doubt I will have *all* the functionality implemented until near the end of next year.
Greg
http://www.patientos.org
Greg--Principal at PatientOS Inc. (888)-NBR1-EMR
good points,
but the politicians have spoken and Medicare will only reimburse on CCHIT certified systems, not compatable systems.
Really, now that's not nice. When does that start? Is that just for ambulatory - or inpatient too?
Not nice, not because of the criteria but the price - did someone say 24k - that wasn't per year was it?
Hmm, maybe I should lobby for some simple criteria that would throw at least one large vendor into disarray in an effort to meet it.
I guess I better start saving up... or looking for some social benefactor...
Al,
Good answer, but again the argument is against high price. As I presented there are solutions in the 10k range.
>>> But you cannot make a argument of cost, you have to use something else.
You see that is where physicians and vendors differ- most physicians are price conscious because we're getting our livelihood dessimated by Medicare/BCBS/Aetna/United and other insurance companies.
You guys think that we have deep pockets and unlimited resources... we don't. Even $10000 is a lot, but please don't ignore what I've complained about the other problems with CCHIT that bug most doctors:
So it is not just cost- I've mentioned numerous arguments in most of my notes; there are a dozen other CCHIT problems outside of cost. But cost is important, and if you force a physician to purchase "x" EHR if they don't want to, then ANY cost is way too much- even if it's FREE.
>>> There are 10 certified vendors and two of them I know for sure charge around $10,000 for one physician and $7,500 for each additional physician.
Plus costs for hardware, teaching (this can be more than the up-front costs), maintenance and other miscellaneous costs, as well as the $500/month or 15% per year fees. The $10000 is only to trap the enduser into the other open-ended agreement that is not unlike any other rental agreement.
I've posted the 2 articles from the aafp website that shows that the same $10000 per license can equate to between $125000 (one article) to $250000 (the other article) over 5 years... not chump change.
Physicians want something that will cost them $1000 for software, training, etc for a ONE TIME CHARGE, with slightly more for the hardware. Why do you think the AC group is so vocal and protective of their software? This is the usual and customary costs for most other industries- just because a purchaser is a physician, chiropracter, dentist, doesn't mean that he has to pay outrageous sums of money for an EMR.