Linux:Yes, an export tool would help and if this P4P program catches on then I'm sure the vendors will build it.
I would argue the other way around: That if the vendors provided an easy way to extract data from the system, more people would be apt to collect P4P dollars. I could go further about where a majority of vendors are in this process respective of their underlying data structures, but then Nick would have to hit me with a Prozac cannon
.
On second thought, what the hell - it's Friday.
I think the fact of the matter is that any vendor capable (both with product capability and development capability) of developing a tool to help people like Lowell among others in this regard would have done so by now, because there can be significant dollars associated with the programs assuming you don't have to pay 15-60 hours of labor for every reporting session. Unfortunately, I am running into more and more vendors that are telling their prospects and clients that programs like P4P, PQRI, etc. are just fads and not here to stay. Reading in between the lines, I'd bet my lunch money that this is a front for a product incapable of storing data and exporting it in a fashion acceptable to these programs. Just my $0.02.
Happy Friday...
Patrick
Patrick Burton
Regional Sales Executive
NextGen Healthcare Info. Systems, Inc.
I work for NextGen Healthcare Information Systems, Inc. My thoughts and opinions are my own and may not reflect that of NextGen Healthcare Information Systems, Inc.