Latest News On Health IT

Latest California Healthline Stories

Process Opens To Get Federal EHR Incentive Money

For Raul Ramirez, it has been a long time coming.

“This is a big day for providers, for the state. This is a big day for California,” Ramirez said.

Ramirez, chief of the Department of Health Care Services’ Office of Health Information Technology, was talking about this week’s initial processing of applications for up to $1.4 billion in federal funds for the state’s electronic health record incentive program.

Data Take Center Stage at Health 2.0 Conference

As efforts to get consumers actively involved in health information technology mature, the focus at the Fifth Annual Health 2.0 Conference in San Francisco showed an evolutionary shift away from getting the conversation started and toward deciding what to talk about.

Prescriptions, Lab Results, Clinical Care Data Top Priorities for Cal eConnect

Implementing electronic prescribing in California may prove a whole lot less challenging than instituting electronic transfers of lab results and sharing patient care information across unaffiliated health organizations. But all three goals of a network of health information exchanges in the state are going to take a whole lot more effort and coordination.

That was the message emanating from a conference conducted via webinar and telephone Friday hosted by Cal eConnect, the agency leading promotion and coordination of electronic health records in the state.

Cal eConnect is the state-designated not-for-profit organization charged with disbursing $38.8 million in money from the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act. The act was part of the 2009 economic stimulus package.

CalHIPSO Still Has ARRA Health IT Money To Spend

More and more primary care providers are ditching their file folders and moving into the era of electronic health records, a trend marked by a milestone achievement in California and highlighted this week in Washington.

“Five or 10 years ago, it was a question of whether or not a provider would adopt electronic patient records; today it’s a question of when they will adopt it,” said Speranza Avram, executive director of the California Health Information Partnership and Services Organization.

Her Oakland-based organization announced last week it has enrolled more than 6,187 health care providers, mainly community health centers and small medical practices, in programs designed to assist transition to EHRs. The programs, funded under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, pay for consultants in regional extension centers across California to provide medical practices with training in implementing electronic patient record-keeping.

Building Public Trust in Electronic Health Information Exchange

The privacy and security “Tiger Team” has been prolific in its issuance of recommendations on everything from patient consent to authentication. The group’s recommendations are likely to factor strongly into the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology’s privacy- and security-related policymaking.