评估 HITECH 的实施情况和经验教训:5 年后。

Marsha Gold, Catherine McLAUGHLIN
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引用次数: 0

摘要

政策要点:健康信息技术促进经济和临床健康法案》(HITECH)的广泛目标要求同时发展复杂且相互依存的基础设施和广泛的关系,这就产生了薄弱环节。虽然联邦立法可以有力地推动变革,但其有效性也取决于其能否适应各州和地方政策以及私人医疗市场。雄心勃勃的目标需要长期的支持,而要维持这种支持可能具有挑战性。未来全国范围内的医疗信息技术(health IT)支持很可能取决于技术能否满足用户的需求,即其功能能够满足政策制定者和其他利益相关者在利用技术促进更好的医疗服务、改善疗效和降低成本方面的利益:经济和临床健康信息技术法案》(HITECH)为开发电子健康信息设定了宏伟目标,将其作为改革医疗服务和改善医疗效果的工具之一。目前,HITECH 的补助资金已大部分用完,但制定标准的法定权力仍在,本文回顾了 HITECH 前 5 年的经验,以评估其实施情况、仍面临的挑战和吸取的教训:本文的回顾源于对 HITECH 法案的全面评估。此前,我们研究了 HITECH 的逻辑,并确定了对其最终成功至关重要的相互依存关系。在本文中,我们以该框架为基础,回顾了自 HITECH 法案颁布以来,在建设其授权的基础设施方面已经取得和尚未取得的成就。我们在回顾中纳入了全球评估以及由美国国家卫生信息技术协调员办公室(ONC)资助的对 HITECH 法案授权的各个项目进行评估的定量和定性进展证据:我们对证据的审查结果喜忧参半。尽管 HITECH 的要求极具挑战性,但其复杂的计划已得到实施,该法案所寻求的重要变革现已到位。电子病历(EHRs)现在以某种形式存在于大多数符合 HITECH 激励条件的专业诊疗机构和医院中,更多的信息正在以电子方式共享,人们关注的焦点也从采用电子病历转向了与使用医疗信息技术(health IT)改善医疗服务和结果相关的更基本的问题。在某些领域,HITECH 迄今取得的成就并没有达到其支持者的希望,因为事实证明,要超越 "有意义使用 "阶段 1 最初设定的较低标准来推动 "有意义使用 "是具有挑战性的。电子病历产品在支持更高级功能(如患者参与和基于人群的护理管理)方面的能力参差不齐。互操作性方面仍然存在许多障碍,限制了不同的医疗服务提供者和医疗机构之间的电子通信:要实现 HITECH 的宏伟目标,需要同时发展复杂且相互依存的基础设施和广泛的关系,其中一些关系比其他关系更有能力向前推进。迄今为止,事实证明,让医疗服务提供者采用电子病历(也许是为了响应经济激励措施)比开发一个强大的基础设施更容易,因为后者不仅能让电子病历中的信息在临床实践中得到有效使用和共享,还能让医疗服务提供者之间共享这些信息。有效的数据交换对于推动全国范围内的医疗服务和支付改革是必不可少的。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Assessing HITECH Implementation and Lessons: 5 Years Later.

Policy points: The expansive goals of the Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act required the simultaneous development of a complex and interdependent infrastructure and a wide range of relationships, generating points of vulnerability. While federal legislation can be a powerful stimulus for change, its effectiveness also depends on its ability to accommodate state and local policies and private health care markets. Ambitious goals require support over a long time horizon, which can be challenging to maintain. The future of health information technology (health IT) support nationally is likely to depend on the ability of the technology to satisfy its users that its functionalities address the interests policymakers and other stakeholders have in using technology to promote better care, improved outcomes, and reduced costs.

Context: The Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act set ambitious goals for developing electronic health information as one tool to reform health care delivery and improve health outcomes. With HITECH's grant funding now mostly exhausted but statutory authority for standards remaining, this article looks back at HITECH's experience in the first 5 years to assess its implementation, remaining challenges, and lessons learned.

Methods: This review derives from a global assessment of the HITECH Act. Earlier, we examined the logic of HITECH and identified interdependencies critical to its ultimate success. In this article, we build on that framework to review what has and has not been accomplished in building the infrastructure authorized by HITECH since it was enacted. The review incorporates quantitative and qualitative evidence of progress from the global assessment and from the evaluations funded by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) of individual programs authorized by the HITECH Act.

Findings: Our review of the evidence provides a mixed picture. Despite HITECH's challenging demands, its complex programs were implemented, and important changes sought by the act are now in place. Electronic health records (EHRs) now exist in some form in most professional practices and hospitals eligible for HITECH incentive payments, more information is being shared electronically, and the focus of attention has shifted from adoption of EHRs toward more fundamental issues associated with using health information technology (health IT) to improve health care delivery and outcomes. In some areas, HITECH's achievements to date have fallen short of the hopes of its proponents as it has proven challenging to move meaningful use beyond the initial low bar set by Meaningful Use Stage 1. EHR products vary in their ability to support more advanced functionalities, such as patient engagement and population-based care management. Many barriers to interoperability persist, limiting electronic communication across a diverse set of largely private providers and care settings.

Conclusions: Achieving the expansive goals of HITECH required the simultaneous development of a complex and interdependent infrastructure and a wide range of relationships, some better positioned to move forward than others. To date, it has proven easier to get providers to adopt EHRs, perhaps in response to financial incentives to do so, than to develop a robust infrastructure that allows the information in EHRs to be used effectively and shared not only within clinical practices but also across providers. Effective exchange of data is necessary to drive the kinds of delivery and payment reforms sought nationwide.

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