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Is “Meaningful Use” Meaningful?

August 19, 2010 Health IT, Healthcare Policy, PSQH No Comments

Now that the “meaningful use” rule has been finalized by the Office of the National Coordinator (ONC), many organizations turn their focus to a rapid deployment of electronic medical record (EMR) systems in an effort to achieve transformation of the United States healthcare system. Unfortunately, EMR adoption is just one tool used to transform health care, and not the single transformative activity so many believe it to be. Transformation of healthcare encompasses enhancing quality of care, improving patient safety, expanding access to care, and reducing the cost of care. EMRs deployed to satisfy the criteria for “meaningful use” can impact these factors, but only within a comprehensive framework that recognizes the role of incentives, clinical decision support, and healthcare information technology (HIT) in facilitating transformation.

Introduction of new technology often distracts us from our primary task. Our fascination with the technology leads us to focus on what the technology can do, rather than what we need the technology to do. This misguided use of technology also occurs when it is used for healthcare delivery. Many EMR implementations focused on the impressive features of the EMR software rather than the workflow requirements of the clinician users.

Healthcare transformation requires a comprehensive vision of care delivery that recognizes the interrelationships of the many stakeholders. Technology by itself only helps improve those interrelationships, while the underlying structure that the interrelationships are built on remains.

Therefore, the “meaningful use” criteria are meaningful in that they help ensure the use of EMRs in ways that can enhance healthcare delivery, they do not transform healthcare. The recently passed Patient Protection and Healthcare Reform Act (2010) does much to move us toward a better healthcare system, but it too does not transform healthcare. Transformation requires many factors working together in an iterative process to deliver the expected results. Some of those factors are outlined below.

Until economic incentives of all the stakeholders align, care delivery will remain inefficient and suboptimal in quality and safety. Providers are incented to provide more care, payors are incented to withhold care, and patients, detached from the direct costs of care, have been molded to always expect care. The culture of healthcare in America is based on the false belief that more care is better care.

Transformation of healthcare requires a complete disruption of our current system of healthcare delivery. Clinical roles require redefining. Workflows will change to meet the needs of these new clinical roles, allowing the HIT tools, such as EMRs, to be leveraged to improve care. “Meaningful use” criteria is a nice first step to help ensure the effective deployment of HIT tools such as EMRs. Nevertheless, it is just a very small step towards truly transforming healthcare.

Excerpts from: Is “Meaningful Use” Meaningful? PSQH, July/August, 2010

Photo Courtesy of  Don Guerwitz Photography First Light. Bhaktapur, Nepal

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