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Microsoft HealthVault is a Serious Business Strategy. Will Google Health Become More than a Hobby?
Google Health…please stick around….but please also get your stuff together.
Over the past few days, several of my respected colleagues have written excellent blog posts essentially asking “Does Google Health have life?”
Scott Shreeve — CLEAR! Shocking Google Health Back to Life
John Moore — Is Google Health Irrelevant?
Will Crawford — Future of Google Health
I share their observations and sentiments. I see Microsoft HealthVault as a serious business strategy while Google Health is more like a hobby (one of probably hundreds at Google).
Are there reasons […]
Health Wonk Review: August Recess and Dog Days of Summer Edition
While Congress is in recess and we all try to beat the heat, check out the latest edition of the Health Wonk Review.
Be sure to savor every word of Dr. Jaan Sidorov’s masterful witticisms!
Medical Home Savings Claims in Medicaid are Not Plausible
by Al Lewis, Disease Management Purchasing Consortium International, Inc.
Medical homes probably do save money in very controlled settings, where the entire team is literally or at least figuratively under one roof, such as Kaiser. However, the belief that one can overlay a traditional medical home model across an entire state and save money in the process turns out to be total fiction.
The poster child for that fiction, North Carolina’s Community Care program, turns out to cost state taxpayers probably $400 […]
Medicare Medical Home Demo (MMHD) is in BIG Trouble
Between the time the MMHD was authorized in 2006 and now, we’ve learned a lot about what works and what doesn’t work in Medicare care coordination programs. The MMHD is between a rock and a hard place — conflicted by two “must achieve” objectives that are diametrically opposed:
As a political matter, the MMHD must save money
As currently structured, the MMHD cannot save money
Please read my guest post
The Medicare Medical Home Demonstration (MMHD): Between a Rock and a Hard Place
over at […]
Overcoming The Penguin Problem: Setting Expectations for EHR Adoption
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Economists call it “The Penguin Problem” — No one moves unless everyone moves, so no one moves.Â
The role of user expectations is crucial in getting penguins to move off of ice floes and in the successful adoption of new network technologies. I’ll cover two main points in today’s essay:
How “The Penguin Problem” Helps Explain Low EHR (electronic health record) Adoption To-Date
How Recent Federal Actions Are Setting Higher Expectations for EHR Adoption
The Penguin Problem and Low EHR Adoption To-Date
While not the only factor, […]
Adieu, LifeCOMM
“Qualcomm pulls the plug on LifeComm” announced Brian Dolan of mobihealthnews recently.Â
As demonstrated by e-CareManagement blog readership, there has been a lot of interest in LifeCOMM. My first blog post on LifeCOMM in 2007 has been single the most commented on post and the second most widely read blog post.
It’s taken me a while to sift through my thoughts and feelings about saying “Goodbye” to LifeCOMM. At first I was deeply disappointed, but after further reflection think that LifeCOMM wasn’t the right […]
RHIOs Emerging From Coma
A subtle but profound shift is occurring in the world of RHIOs/HIEs (Regional Health Information Organizations/Health Information Exchanges).
…and the title of the eHealth Initiative’s Sixth Annual Survey of Health Information Exchange says it all:
Migrating Toward Meaningful Use
What’s happening here?
Geek Wisdom: “Interoperability” Must Include Process Collaboration
I know — you’re thinking that using “geek” and “wisdom” in the same sentence is an oxymoron. Bear with me — I’m trying to make a really important point in today’s posting.
Interoperability has multiple dimensions — and I’d bet that most of us have never thought of interoperabilty as involving “process” — people working together and collaborating; I know I hadn’t.
The Interoperability Work Group of HL7’s Electronic Health Record (EHR) Technical Committee was formed in April 2005 to attempt to define […]
Joe the Doctor: “…’scuse me, why do I want to bet-my-practice on an EMR?”
Blogger Fred Pennic writes a review of the (HIMSS) Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society 2008 Book of the Year Award. The book is entitled Keys to EMR Success: Selecting and Implementing an Electronic Medical Record and is written by Ronald Sterling, CPA, MBA.
There is no question,” says Sterling “that the selection and implementation of an EMR is a ‘bet-the-practice’ proposition. If you fail, you end up with more costs and greater frustration.…” (emphasis added)
PowerPoint Presentation — EHR 2.0
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Click on the graphic to download a copy of today’s BrightTALK webcast.