Health IT in the Latino Community–From Concept to Practice January 24, 2012
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, Health Care, HIT, Interoperability, Stimulus Plan, Technology.Tags: Health IT, HIMSS, Latino
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If you are planning to attend HIMSS 2012, make sure to stop by the HIMSS Latino Community Workshop.
Learn more here
Infinity Success Conference January 17, 2012
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in Conferences, HIT, Technology.Tags: Dircec, EHR, EMR, Florida, HIPAA, HITECH, infinity Success, Medical Records, NwHIN, Telemedecine
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Uber Operations will be presenting at this year’s Infinity Conference in Fort Lauderdale, Florida. Hosted by Dr Delgado of Taino Consultants, the two-day event is expected to attract more than 500 international doctors and nurses.
- Telemedicine 101
- What is telemedicine and how we can apply diverse technologies to virtually reach and treat patients.
- Pain Management Alternatives
- Treatment and protocols using technology as focus rather than drugs.
- Electronic Medical Records
- Basic of Electronic Medical Records.
- Transitioning to an Electronic
- Medical Records Environment
- Experiences from Users in multispecialty settings.
- Virtual Offices
- Is a virtual office for me?
- New Technologies
- Emerging technologies for clinical and office use, latest advances in medicine and cancer treatment, social media, marketing and many others.
- Topics will be presented in Spanish/English.
- Attendees will receive Continuing Medical Education (CME) Credit.
- Two days full of information and networking opportunities.
- Special rates for students and health professionals.
Register here: http://www.infinityconference.org/reservations
New Statewide Health Data Network Will Improve Patient Care December 13, 2011
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in Data Integration, EMR, Health Care, Interoperability, NHIN, open source, Stimulus Plan, Technology.Tags: BBRHIO, Direct, FHA, FHDN, FMA, NwHIN, Uber Operations
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TALLAHASSEE, Fla. – Florida healthcare patients soon will receive more collaborative and streamlined care with improved safety, outcomes, privacy and efficiency thanks to the launch of a new, secure, cloud-based, statewide health information exchange (HIE) network.
Leaders from a new Florida company, HIE Networks, the Florida Hospital Association and the Florida Medical Association joined forces at a news conference to announce the creation of the Florida Health Data Network (FHDN), which will make patient medical records easily accessible to authorized healthcare providers.
FHDN is a statewide network developed, solely funded and operated by HIE Networks LLC, a private, physician-owned, national provider of integrated digital medical records technology. Based in Tallahassee, Fla., HIE Networks grew out of its co-founders’ successful piloting of the Big Bend Regional Healthcare Information Organization (BBRHIO), a health information exchange network serving nine counties in North Florida which has been nationally-recognized as one of the top 12 regional HIEs in the country.
“One of the greatest challenges to providing efficient, cost-effective, high-quality health care is access to patients’ medical history by health care providers,” said Dr. Dan Kaelin, co-founder and Chief Medical Officer of HIE Networks. “The Florida Health Data Network will change that forever.”
FHDN can connect hospitals, physicians, laboratories, pharmacies and insurers without geographic boundaries using “cloud” technology that allows for the networking and sharing of patient clinical records in a secure, fully integrated, health information exchange, said Allen Byington, co-founder and CEO of HIE Networks.
“The core HIE technology allows for providers, hospitals and communities to avoid bearing the high capital cost of acquiring and maintaining the initial technology, requiring only a modest monthly service fee,” said Byington. “Leveraging the FHDN technology, providers only have to fund their Electronic Medical Record (EMR) vendors’ interface cost and a small staff-training fee. Our goal is to significantly reduce the capital barrier to HIE adoption nationally.”
“By exchanging patient clinical records in a robust HIE network, physicians can eradicate inefficiencies, duplication of services and medical errors,” said Kaelin.
“Hospital emergency rooms can better provide prompt diagnosis and treatment. Pharmacists can be certain that a new prescription doesn’t conflict with an existing one. Lab and radiology results can be shared and accessed instantly for prompt evaluation and treatment. Patients have more knowledge and control of their treatments and procedures. Elimination of duplicative testing and elimination of waste will help streamline treatment, reduce delivery costs, reduce errors and, most importantly, improve outcomes and save lives.”
“Another unique aspect and value of the FHDN,” said Byington, ”is that it is community-based, local-provider-driven and compatible with other local groups and networks – including BBRHIO and the Gulf Coast Health Information Exchange based in Manatee County – united under HIE Networks’ core HIE technology umbrella.”
The HIE Networks’ endorsements by the Florida Hospital Association (FHA), the Florida Medical Association (FMA) and other provider affiliations will help provide a trusted roadmap and pathway for providers to confidently address their HIE needs, says Byington. HIE Networks is the only endorsed HIE vendor for FHA and FMA.
“The Florida Hospital Association supports local-provider-driven health information exchange based on national standards,” said FHA President Bruce Rueben. “Hospitals, physicians and other healthcare providers collaborating to leverage health information exchange improve the coordination and quality of care for patients. FHA is pleased to collaborate with HIE Networks and the Florida Medical Association in the expansion of patient-focused health information exchange.”
“The FMA conducted an exhaustive search among dozens of international, national, regional and local health information exchange vendors with the primary intent to identify and qualify a health information exchange solution that would preserve physician stewardship of sensitive personal health information for the benefit of our patients,” said Dr. Chris Pittman, chairman of FMA’s Health Information Technology Committee. “The FMA identified several excellent vendor finalists; however, HIE Networks prevailed for several reasons: HIE Networks enjoys a multi-year track record as a proven and sustainable community-wide health information exchange model, has demonstrable and deployed solutions that meet physician and patient needs at the point of facilitating high-quality care, an ability to transmit electronic patient information at low cost to both physicians and patients and they are committed to local, provider-driven HIE that promises to preserve the time-honored physician-patient relationship.”
Byington stressed that security and privacy issues are paramount with FHDN.
“Robust HIE actually improves patient privacy by reducing unauthorized access to patient data,” said Byington. “With HIE, we can prevent records from being faxed to the wrong locations and know exactly when and who accessed a patient record.
“The key is that we’re not a monolithic statewide HIE organization, but a unifier, integrator and consolidator of local providers and HIE organizations,” added Byington. “We connect any provider or organization and build uniformity, consistency and accessibility as needed to share information across communities, regions and, ultimately, states. We’ve also added Direct-enabled, secure messaging to FHDN; however, unlike other Direct messaging platforms, FHDN-facilitated messages can be automatically integrated as a part of the patient HIE clinical record rather than as a stand-alone, non-relational communication.” Direct is a national, secure-messaging platform used by some physicians and other medical providers. “With this capability, a single provider login is all that’s needed to access patient clinical records and send secure communications to those not yet participating in an HIE.”
HIE Networks’ FHDN currently has records for nearly one million unique Florida patients representing about 5 percent of Florida’s population. In addition, FHDN already processes more than 32 million messages and responds to more than 800,000 user queries. Current community commitments are expected to increase FHDN’s records to about 12 percent of the state’s population by second quarter 2012. “We expect that percentage to grow exponentially over the next year and beyond,” said Byington.
Nationally, the concept of an interconnected, private and secure electronic medical record (EMR) system is getting more attention, thanks in part to the 2009 American Recovery & Reinvestment Act (ARRA, also known as the stimulus bill) which set aside more than $20 billion for incentives to health care providers to deploy and use such systems. During the past year, many more providers have come on board the EMR train, says Byington, and many more are finally starting to see the benefits of HIE.
HIE Networks’ strategic partnership with Über Operations – also a Tallahassee-based company – will address the large-scale integration requirements needed to program EMR interfaces of providers statewide and beyond. “Über Operations’ existing work with the Florida Department of Health and healthcare organizations throughout the nation position the FHDN to streamline the on-boarding and interfacing process for providers and trading partners,” said Byington.
“For the past seven years, we have focused on providing expert and innovative data integration services to both public and private healthcare organizations throughout the nation,” said Eduardo Gonzalez Loumiet, Managing Director of Über Operations. “With this new network, we will be in a position to implement state-of-the-art technology to connect local providers, ultimately improving the health care of millions.”
HIE Networks grew out of the Big Bend Regional Healthcare Information Organization, which was profiled in a recent report on leading HIEs by the National eHealth Collaborative (NeHC). In response to news of the launch of FHDN, Kate Berry, CEO of NeHC, said, “Today’s announcement is an impressive example of continued innovation in HIE with a relentless focus on what’s best for the patient. The Big Bend team and its broader HIE Networks company are leveraging technology to bring low cost solutions to the market that will benefit patients by improving safety, quality, care coordination, and achieving cost savings.” To view the NeHC report, go to www.nationalehealth.org/secrets-hie-success-lessons-leaders.
For more information about the Florida Health Data Network and HIE Networks, go towww.HIEnetworks.com, call (850) 702-0365 or email zach@HIEnetworks.com. For more information about Big Bend RHIO, go to www.BigBendHealth.com.
About HIE Networks, LLC
HIE Networks is a leading provider of local health information exchange (HIE) services, with secure, standards-based exchanges that create and operate efficient, effective and sustainable health information networks at the local and regional levels. By acting as a region’s single reference point for patient records, HIE Networks allows hospitals, physicians and medical practices, laboratories, pharmacies and insurers to collaborate and streamline patient care, thereby improving the safety, outcomes, privacy and efficiency of healthcare services in their local communities. The HIE Networks service mix includes practice consultation, social architecture, legal structure, hardware support, software implementation, networking, integration, training and support.
About Big Bend RHIO
Big Bend RHIO is a federally-recognized 501(c)(3) not-for-profit that has deployed BigBendHealth.com, a first-of-its-kind health resource that brings with it economic benefits, a connected workforce, improved medical care and a breakthrough in exchange of clinical records. It serves as an essential communication resource for health care in the Capital region, with many resources offered in one place. BigBendHealth.com is the largest active regional HIE in Florida with millions of records for over 500,000 unique patients in the system and processing over 600,000 new clinical messages a month. BigBendHealth.com initiatives involve every major component of North Florida’s local healthcare system from physicians’ offices to HMOs to hospitals, laboratories and pharmacies. BigBendHealth.com is a partner in the delivery of safer, more cost-effective healthcare, placing its community at the head of the line for federal and state research dollars and making Tallahassee a model for other communities seeking to control the cost and improve the quality of local healthcare. BigBendHealth.com is anchored in Tallahassee, Fla., and serves nine counties in the Big Bend area of the Florida Panhandle, including Gadsden, Franklin, Jefferson, Leon, Liberty, Madison, Wakulla, Taylor and Dixie counties.
About Über Operations
Founded in 2004 in Tallahassee, Fla., Über Operations is a leading provider of health care IT services. They have provided integration services for well-known organizations, including the Florida Department of Health, Texas Department of State Health Services, Mercy Hospital of Miami, National Cancer Institute, Trinity Health, Association of Public Health Laboratories, and the University of Washington. Über Operations’ team members are experts in various technologies, such as Rhapsody, Cloverleaf, Mirth, PHINMS, Direct, and NwHIN CONNECT, to name a few. Über Operations is nationally recognized by the Association of Public Health Labs (APHL) and the CDC as their choice to architect, develop, host, and support the PHLIP RnR health information exchange hub. Über Operations was named “Health Innovators” by Florida Trend Magazine in 2011. For more information on Über Operations please visit www.UberOps.com
Media Advisory – HIE NETWORKS New Conference December 12, 2011
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in Health Care, Technology.Tags: Florida, HIE Networks
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MEDIA ADVISORY
DATE: Dec. 9, 2011
CONTACT: Rick Oppenheim, (850) 386-9100
WHAT: News conference featuring leaders in Florida’s medical and technology communities.
WHO: Representatives from the Florida Hospital Association, the Florida Medical Association and HIE Networks, LLC
WHERE: The Florida Press Center, 336 E. College Ave., Suite 100, Tallahassee
WHEN: 10 a.m. EST, Tuesday, Dec. 13, 2011
WHY: To announce the launch of an innovative, historic, groundbreaking and collaborative statewide initiative by HIE Networks supported and endorsed by the Florida Hospital Association, the Florida Medical Association and health care technology providers that will streamline patient care and improve the safety, outcomes, privacy and efficiency of health care in Florida.
Team Member Profile: Linda Nelson December 12, 2011
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in Data Integration, EMR, Health Care, HIT, Stimulus Plan, Team Member Profile, Technology, Uber Operations.Tags: FDOH, Florida, Linda Nelson, Tallahassee, Uber Operations
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Linda Nelson joined Uber Operations a little over a year ago. Linda Nelson’s experience includes executive, program management, policy development, technical, leadership, commercial, and governmental roles throughout her highly successful career. Her diverse resume includes commercial, local, state, and national expertise in management and consulting in organizational development, health care, telecommunications, information technology, education, infrastructure development, and statewide and national safety.
She has served as Chief Information Officer (CIO) of the Florida Department of Health, Management Services and the Palm Beach County District Schools, the State of Florida Telecommunications Director, Executive Director of the Florida Distance Learning Network, and Director for Center for Educational Technology for the Department of Education.
Linda has presented internationally, nationally, and at the state and local levels on areas as diverse as infrastructure development, FCC deregulation, economic development, telemedicine and electronic health records, bio-terrorism, privacy, security, and product and service development for emerging markets.
Specific areas of expertise include information management (security, user access controls, data integrity and integration), data and system integration, telecommunications (data, voice, video, image, and Internet protocols), and infrastructure (hardware, software, e-business systems/software), regulatory compliance, quality management (LEAN, Six-Sigma), public policy, strategic project and program management, enviro-consulting, sustainability (SPARK/SCORE, LEED, DSM), and strategic business/project development.
Linda is a graduate of Leadership Tallahassee Class 24 and founding member of College Leadership Tallahassee. She is a Board Secretary of Rotary International, Tallahassee Sunrise Chapter. She is Vice-Chair for the Board Directors for Big Bend Community Based Care (corporation), Secretary and Executive Board Member Early Learning Coalition, President of the Board of Directors for the Office of Public Guardian, President of Big Bend Crime stoppers, and President and CEO of EarthSTEPS, LLC. She is an appointed member of the Leon County Schools External Audit Committee and serves/or has served on a variety of other committees including the 2007 Community Human Services Partnership committee. She is a Team Member at BCMPros. Linda volunteers for many community based initiatives including providing meals for the local homeless shelter. She continues to serve on national workgroups and presents on related Information Technology, Privacy and Security, Health, Social Service and Environmental issues.
At Uber Operations, she is currently working on a project for Hillsborough County, Florida.
Linda on LinkedIn.
Team Member Profile: Michael Arradondo October 17, 2011
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in Health Care, Team Member Profile, Technology, Uber Operations.Tags: Florida Department of Health, Linux, Michael Arradondo, NASA, Solaris, Toyota, Uber Operations
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Michael Arradondo, has been a team member at Uber Operations since 2008. He has over 16 years of experience in system administration and integration. He graduated from Florida A&M University with a B.S. in Electrical Engineering and a B.S. Computer Engineering. He is currently working on several projects, including at the Florida Department of Health, where he is the Linux and Solaris System Lead, managing a complex site with over 60 Solaris and Linux servers for production, test, and development for five different groups. Michael also plays a critical role in Uber’s DIRECT implementation for the state of Florida.
Prior to joining Uber Operations, Michael worked at Florida A&M University, Toyota Motor Company, and NASA. He lives in Tallahassee, Florida with is wife, Sharon Williams . Michael is also an avid photographer.
Click here to learn more about Michael.
Nominated for Business Award October 6, 2011
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in Health Care, Technology.Tags: Business, Dandi Award, Florida, Tallahassee
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We are honored to have been nominated for a Dandi Award. The 2011 Dandi Awards spotlights the great accomplishments of local entrepreneurs, as well as community leaders and supporters. e2eConnect will host The Dandi’s at 6:30 p.m. on Thursday, October 6th in celebration of the spirit of entrepreneurship at the amazing Hotel Duval, Horizon Ballroom on North Monroe Street in Tallahassee, Florida.
Hope to see you there. Wish us luck.
More info:
Presentation for ELR National Task Force September 28, 2011
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in EMR, HIT, Technology.Tags: APHL, CDC, Eduardo Gonzalez Loumiet, ELR, PHLIP, RNR
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On October 4, 2011, Eduardo Gonzalez Loumiet will present to the ELR National Task Force. Eduardo will present on the PHLIP RnR Hub. The presention, which will be conducted via webinar will focus on: RnR today and tomorrow, with emphasis on the different projects that used the RnR Hub for secure message transport and routing like: PHLIP Electronic Surveillance Message (ELSM), Pandemic Influenza Project, ETOR Salmonella, and the Florida Dept of Health’s ELR Program.
Web Conference Details:
National ELR Working Group Call
- Tuesday October 4, 2011, 10-11 Pacific, 1-2 Eastern
- CONNECTION INFO:
- AUDIO (Note the new number): Dial 1-866-816-5393 Passcode: 55565077
- VISUAL: Please pre-register for the webinar at https://www2.gotomeeting.com/register/452472195
Florida Trend – Uber Operations: Healthcare Innovators April 30, 2011
Posted by egonzalezloumiet in Health Care, HIT, Technology.Tags: Florida, HealthCare, HIT
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We are honored to be mentioned in Florida Trend’s May 2011 issue as one of Florida’s Healthcare Innovators. It is is a testament to our team’s hard work & dedication.
Guest Post: Playing Games with ONC Certification February 15, 2011
Posted by gonzalezloumiet in EMR, Health Care, HIT, Technology.Tags: CCHIT, EMR, HITECH, ONC
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(This is a guest post from our friends at Software Advice.)
By: Houston Neal Houston Neal
Director of Marketing at Software Advice
(513)364-0117
houston@softwareadvice.com
“Certified” is the $44,000 buzzword prefixing electronic health records (EHR) software. To qualify for Health Information Technology for Economic and Clincal Health (HITECH) Act incentive payments, you must use an EHR that is certified by the government. Additionally, you must use a system – or systems – that offer 100% of the functional and security capabilities required to meet “Meaningful Use” criteria.
Many EHR vendors are promoting their products as “certified,” but the claim can be misleading. There are three ways they could lead you astray:
Alternative Certifications
Before the HITECH Act, two organizations certified medical software:
- Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT) - CCHIT began certifying EHR software in 2006. Since then they have released 10 certification programs for ambulatory and inpatient EHRs.
- KLAS – KLAS is a private organization that has gathered ratings on EHRs since 1997. Every year they rank EHR vendors and bestow a “Best in KLAS” award on the top 20.
In an effort to stand out from the other 300+ EHR systems on the market, vendors widely promote their CCHIT or KLAS credentials. They may even tack the word “certified” onto their CCHIT or KLAS approved product. This muddies the water for providers. They have to distinguish between CCHIT, KLAS and certification from an ONC-Authorized Testing and Certification Body (ONC-ATCB). While CCHIT and KLAS are meaningful credentials, they’re not the certifications that qualify for incentive funds.
This is especially confusing because CCHIT is now one of six organizations approved to certify EHRs for the HITECH Act. So, if an EHR vendor claims they have CCHIT certification, you’ll need to clarify which one. Is it ONC-ATCB certification, or one of CCHIT’s independent credentials?
Complete EHR vs EHR Module
Software vendors can receive ONC-ATCB certification for a complete EHR or an EHR module. This means a product doesn’t need to meet all criteria for Meaningful Use – instead, it can be partially certified if one or more functions meet a subset of requirements. For example, a vendor could certify their e-prescribing application or their patient portal.
This under-publicized detail could cost you thousands of dollars; by itself, a certified EHR module won’t make you eligible for incentive payments. You must use two or more modular EHRs that, combined, meet 100% of the ONC criteria. So while vendors can officially promote a module as having ONC-ATCB certification, it may fall short of making you eligible.
Guaranteed Incentive Payments
Be mindful of guaranteed incentive payments. It is reasonable for a vendor to guarantee they’ll meet certification criteria. In fact, you might make it a requirement in your purchase decision.
However, guaranteeing incentive payments is altogether different. Technology alone won’t make you eligible. EHRs are just a means to an end. Ultimately, you are responsible for achieving Meaningful Use status. So be wary of this type of guarantee. Read the fine print and find out how you are reimbursed if you don’t qualify for incentive payments. Does the vendor reimburse you the full amount of lost incentive payments? Or do you just get reimbursed for the cost of the software? You shouldn’t purchase a system based on this guarantee alone.
Five Key Questions to Ask Vendors
To help you avoid these pitfalls, we put together a list of 5 questions to ask vendors. Answering these will put you in a good position to become eligible for incentive payments.
- Which certification does the EHR have: CCHIT, KLAS or ONC-ATCB? You must use an EHR that is ONC-ATCB certified in order to be eligible for incentive payments.
- Which product version has been certified? Ask the vendor for complete details of their ONC-ATCB 2011/2012 certification, including: product name and version, date certified, unique product identification number, the criteria for which they are certified, and the clinical quality measures for which they were tested.
- Does the vendor have certification for a complete EHR or an EHR module? If module, you will need to use more than one to be eligible for incentive payments. The ONC has created a handy website that allows you to build a list of EHR modules that meet 100% of ONC criteria.
- Will the vendor resubmit their EHR for final certification in 2012? The current certification is temporary and only lasts through 2011. Make sure your vendor has plans to reapply in 2012, and find out if they will certify a complete EHR or just a module.
- Are you purchasing through a reseller or other business partner that renamed the product? If so, make sure the renamed product has been approved by the ONC-ATCB. Even if it is the same version with identical features and functionality, it won’t make their Certified HIT Products List unless the original vendor reports it to an ONC-ATCB.
Read more: Playing Games with ONC Certification.











