Critical view of HIMSS / MGMA security toolbox

The folks over at HIMSS and MGMA have teamed up to produce what they call the HIMSS Privacy & Security Toolkit for Small Provider Organizations.  The toolkit provides medical practices with a wealth of information about HIPAA, HITECH, meaningful use, privacy and security.  Below is the letter from both the HIMSS and MGMA CEOs describing the security toolkit.

Message from the CEOs

As small provider organizations increasingly leverage electronic health records and other information technologies, they face significant challenges in their efforts to secure patient information. This is coupled with their efforts to comply with a myriad of existing and newly revised federal requirements. There is also a renewed emphasis on the importance of maintaining the confidentiality of electronic health information due to patient concern and media attention. Providers also recognize that protecting against a breach of health information will require employee training and the development of effective safeguards and reporting processes.

Targeting the needs of these small providers, HIMSS and the Medical Group Management Association (MGMA) (www.mgma.com) have partnered to create the HIMSS Privacy & Security Toolkit for Small Provider Organizations. This useful and practical toolkit will assist first in understanding the rapidly changing privacy and security environment, and then help providers implement an appropriate set of policies and procedures that best meet the needs of their organization. Since smaller organizations may not typically have the resources or technical expertise found in larger institutions, this toolkit will act as a roadmap and resource for clinical and administrative staff to navigate the complex privacy and security laws and regulations and to understand the security components required to participate in Medicare’s “Meaningful Use” EHR incentive program.

We hope this toolkit proves helpful as providers move forward with their health information privacy and security preparations.

I am a strong believer that the more medical practices understand privacy and security issues, the more they will do to protect patient information. So the HIMSS security toolkit is a welcome addition. The only issue I have with it is that it has too much information. With too much information it makes it hard to digest all of the content. In a rough count I came up with around 50+ links to documents ranging from CMS Security Series paper #7 “Implementation for the Small Provider” (12/10/2007) to Meaningful Use Introduction (2/12/2011).  Each of the links provides great information but the problem is that it is too much information. I am not sure who is going to read all that information and be able to digest it and formulate a plan for protecting patient information. I think this information has to be summarized and put into a form that is easy to understand.

They do offer a method of adding additional tools to the toolkit so maybe someone will put a good summary together.  Maybe they will utilize video to make it easier to understand and make it somewhat entertaining. Reading 50 links and over 500 pages of information is just not that much fun.

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Washable keyboard ideal for exam rooms

Econo-Keys makes a washable keyboard that is very well suited for exam rooms, operating rooms, etc. 

Econo-Keys states the following about their keyboards:

Econo-Keys specializes in economical keyboards that are sealed and completely washable to withstand daily scrubdowns with anti-bacterial agents, enabling them to meet and exceed any hygienic protocol and reduce the spread of infectious bacteria such as MRSA, E. Coli and Hepatitis C.

The company says it protects against:

  • Splashing, hose-directed and submerged water
  • Bleach, alcohol and hospital-grade disinfectants
  • Corrosive, abrasive, acidic and alkaline substances
  • Dirt, dust, sand and other airborne debris
  • Extreme temperatures

John Lynn over at EMR and HIPAA has a video of the product from the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) exhibit floor of the Econo-Keys keyboard in action.

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GE Healthymagination firing on all cylinders

On May 7, 2009 GE Healthcare announced a $6 billion marketing campaign and product development initiative that focuses on healthcare.  Since then GE Healthcare has been very busy with advertising, partnership announcements and product announcements.

If you watched the Olympics over the past two weeks you couldn’t help but see commercials for GE Healthcare.  The Take a Look commercial that announced their new handheld ultrasound machine was quite impressive.  Did anyone else have flashbacks to Star Trek and Dr. McCoy’s tricoder?  The other commercial that stood out was the one for their EHR where all the patient’s doctors stood up one by one to comment on his medical history.

In addition to the Olympic ads, GE Healthcare announced a partnership with Intel and the Mayo Clinic to study remote home monitoring.  The study will use GE/Intel remote monitoring devices. 

The year-long study, led by the Mayo Clinic, will involve 200 high-risk patients over the age of 60. It will explore and evaluate whether GE/Intel remote monitoring devices might reliably be put to use in reducing hospitalizations and emergency department visits.

Yesterday at the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society (HIMSS) conference, GE Healthcare announced the following:

– Debut of GE’s new clinical knowledge platform that enables healthcare delivery organizations to improve performance against their quality targets.

– Launch of GE’s next-generation eHealth Solutions platform — an infrastructure offering that includes expanded services for health information exchange, a clinical portal and a patient health management system.

– Demonstration of planned enhancements to eHealth Information Exchange (HIE) which are expected to enable the HIE to view reports on healthcare quality at the provider level, state level and information exchange level based entirely on information collected from participating providers.

– Enhancing the quality of patient care and addressing the needs of IT professionals, GE Healthcare IT’s latest imaging solution debuts with new technology to bring images to the EMR using a single point of access.

– A suite of rapid implementation packages for GE’s proven electronic medical record and revenue cycle management solutions.

– Announcing the addition of thirty hospitals to the business’ latest Centricity(R) Enterprise EMR platform since November, fueling double-digit growth.

As you can see, GE Healthcare seems to be following through on it’s Healthymagination announcment.

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