Sunday, 14 November 2010

Outsourcing Medical Transcription Services – Save Money


Outsourcing medical transcription services reduces the workload and can help save money.
From the business point of view, outsourcing medical transcription services is believed to be very cost-effective. There are numerous medical facilities in the US which have recognized the benefits offered by the outsourcing companies and are pleased with their functioning.
Medical transcription is stressful and time consuming. The major disadvantage of employing in-house staff to carry out the transcription work is that it is not economical as the expenditure incurred (employee benefits, salary) is huge. Moreover, it proves impractical in the long run. Doctors, however, find it difficult to manage transcription work and treat patients. Excess work invariably results in stress and this could adversely affect the treatment of patients.
Outsourcing of medical transcription is therefore the most sought after service as it reduces the workload and substantially decreases client expenditure. Outsourcing of work can be either onshore or offshore. The cost of labor in countries like India, Philippines, and China is far less than that in developed countries like the US, UK and Canada.
Professional MT companies employ experienced transcriptionists who are trained in the field. The companies work round the clock and this makes the processing of work faster. The use of the latest technology and software also helps in speedy completion of the work. The work is constantly assessed and regular quality checks are conducted by proofreaders and analysts. This ensures that accuracy and standard of work is consistently maintained.
Outsourcing medical transcription services can help save money anywhere from 40% to 60%. A flexible and client-centric company handles all the aspects of transcription and provides unsolicited customer and technical support. Doctors find sufficient time to attend to their patients and focus on giving adequate treatment which they rightly deserve.

Monday, 18 October 2010

EMR Costs


The price of Electronic Medical Records (EMR) software is quite high, but the benefits of adopting EMR software can save you a lot of money in the long run. If you are a physician running your own private practice, then you should be weighing the pros and cons of adopting an EMR system. Those days are long over when practices had to keep a pile of files to properly archive the information related to the multitude of patients who walked into their medical facilities.
Our dependence on paper is gradually decreasing and tools like EMR software can easily hold all the important medical data in hard disks, which occupy less space compared to the traditional sources. Proper archiving and categorization of data becomes easier if practices decide to replace their old filing methods with modern technology. Automation of data collection and retrieval can dramatically increase the productivity and efficiency of practices.
The price of an EMR system can range from a thousand dollars to ten thousand dollars, and sometimes they cost even more. The sky is the limit for these products and EMR costs increase as the system becomes more feature-rich. If you own a very small medical facility where you are the sole practitioner, then a light version of good EMR software worth five thousand dollars will serve the purpose. Huge facilities can buy complete EMR systems that cost around forty thousand dollars.
How to get the best deal
EMR software offers a number of benefits but practices should perform a cost-benefit analysis before adopting this new technology. This will help them know if the system will serve their purpose. EMR costs can be prohibitive and a huge amount of money is at stake if you choose a system that does not meet the needs of your practice. Therefore, it is important to be completely sure of the product before you make the purchase decision. You devote time to find the product that meets all your requirements and can be scaled in future. There are some points to consider when you conduct the cost – benefit analysis for the EMR system that you intend to purchase.
Analyze what you need to get done:
First of all, practices need to take note of their current and future requirements. They should be able to collect relevant information such as the number of physicians in the medical facility, the staff to physician ratio, the patient capacity of the center and the average number of phone calls help desk attends every workday.
Training:
If you are purchasing a low cost, entry level EMR software, you will have to pay a certain amount of money to train your staff. Most of the expensive EMR software packages come with free training of staff members, so that they can get used to the interface and handle the workload from day one. There might be some initial hiccups while operating the new software. It is therefore important that the EMR vendor agree to offer on-site training to the staff for the first few months.
Implementation:
The software provider will also charge for the implementation expenses involved in installing and configuring the hardware according to customers’ preferences. An increase in working staff members usually means an increase in the implementation costs. So, it can become a substantial amount for a large practice. Once the EMR software is installed, practices also need to digitalize all the information they had in the files to make the system completely functional.
Hardware:
As soon as practices adopt the EMR system, they discover the need to buy a lot of new hardware to provide proper support o their infrastructure. The prices of computers, printers and server stations should also be considered while you do cost and benefit analysis to gain a clearer picture of the EMR costs. If you want to utilize the EMR product to its full potential, then you need hardware that perfectly complements the software. Make sure that you buy the computer hardware after much deliberation so that it does not go obsolete in a few months. Computer hardware with the newest configuration should always be bought from a reputed dealer so that you are assured of support and maintenance whenever anything goes wrong.
Support and maintenance:
After installing the EMR software, practices need to make provision for annual maintenance costs that become necessary for both the newly acquired software and hardware. The power consumption of a medical facility will increase significantly once you have installed a number of computers and other related hardware to run the new system. Practices may also need to rewire the entire electrical architecture so that the system can take the load of the various machines that will need to be connected.
Hiring:
EMR costs can rise drastically if practices don’t hire a networking professional to monitor and maintain the network in their facilities. A networking expert will ensure that the workstations remain connected to each other and seamlessly exchange data. If you want to keep your system up and running at all times, then you will also need to hire a few hardware maintenance experts to keep a watch on the entire system.
Update:
Your work is not finished once the purchasing and installation have been completed, as the EMR software will need to be updated from time to time. This means a certain amount of expenditure has to be made every year. In order to keep your system up-to-date, you will need to sign certain agreements with the vendor so that you can get access to all the updates as they are released.
Replacing your traditional systems with modern technology may costs quite a lot but it is definitely one of the smartest decisions a practice can ever take. The benefits far outweigh the costs incurred in investing in an EMR system.
It may seem that the initial investment or the EMR costs are a bit high, but you will save a lot of time and money that you would have otherwise spent on papers, filing, and storage space. The cost of filing all of your patients’ medical records and billing information can surmount over the years. Even if you have the best file management system in the world, your will still have to spend a fortune every year to keep the paper documents intact.
Look for government assistance to help finance your EMR software. There are various federal grants that could subsidize EMR costs to your health care facility. With all of this information considered, one has to be very patient while looking for the EMR software for your health facility. Consultation with an EMR expert will definitely increase the chances of procuring a system that is cost-effective for you.

Monday, 27 September 2010

Blumenthal: Meaningful use will focus on goals of care, not technology


National health IT coordinator Dr. David Blumenthal isn’t allowed to say what the final rules for meaningful use of EMRs will look like until HHS releases its formal proposal, but every time he gives a speech, he drops a new hint or two about what he’s thinking. Monday in San Francisco, Blumenthal largely gave attendees at the American Medical Informatics Association’s annual symposium what they wanted to hear by reiterating his philosophy that technology simply is an enabler of quality improvement, not a panacea for healthcare.
“The meaningful use framework will be about the goals of care, not the technology,” Blumenthal said. While he didn’t elaborate on that statement, he did state the position of the Obama administration–one largely held by the informatics community, if not the broaded healthcare industry–that the billions of dollars in federal subsidies aren’t simply meant to buy EMRs for providers. “It’s not the money that will turn out to be the most important,” Blumenthal said.
Instead, the net $19 billion investment is a way to demonstrate that EMRs should and will be accepted in the fairly near future as “symbolic of professionalism in medicine,” just as much as the stethoscope or examination table are today. “The idea that government should subsidize health IT will be as foreign an idea that the government should buy stethoscopes or exam tables for doctors,” Blumenthal explained.
“Information is really the lifeblood of medicine,” Blumenthal added. “Health information technology is its circulatory system.”
During the Q&A portion of the session, legendary medical informaticist Dr. Clement McDonald, the longtime director of the Regenstrief Institute for Health Care in Indianapolis and now the head of the Lister Hill National Center for Biomedical Communications of the National Library of Medicine, questioned this analogy. McDonald said HHS should approach health IT the way the Environmental Protection Agency regulates water quality. “Put a little onus on the polluters,” McDonald said, referring to providers of “dirty” data that’s useless. He drew a small round of applause.

Wednesday, 25 August 2010

First Look at ‘Meaningful Use’


The meaningful use workgroup of the HIT Policy Committee has released its initial recommendations for a definition of “meaningful use” of electronic health records. The definition is important because under the economic stimulus law, providers must “meaningfully use” EHRs to receive financial incentives from Medicare and Medicaid.
These initial recommendations do not include a formal definition of meaningful use. But they are the initial recommendation of the functionalities that will be required by 2011 when incentives start. “This is the beginning of a conversation that will continue for some time,” said David Blumenthal, M.D., the national coordinator for health information technology, during a meeting of the HIT Policy Committee, a public-private advisory group. Blumenthal added that “there is a long way to go” before a final definition of meaningful use is achieved.
The workgroup’s initial recommendations include 22 objectives–most covering inpatient and outpatient care–for EHRs in 2011. These include, among others:
  • Use CPOE for all order types including medications;
  • Implement drug-drug, drug-allergy and drug-formulary checks;
  • Maintain an up-to-date problem list;
  • Generate and transmit permissible prescriptions electronically;
  • Maintain an active medication allergy list;
  • Send reminders to patients per their preference for preventive and follow-up care;
  • Document a progress note for each encounter;
  • Provide patients with an electronic copy or electronic access to clinical information such as lab results, problem list, medication lists and allergies;
  • Provide clinical summaries for patients for each encounter;
  • Exchange key clinical information among providers of care;
  • Perform medication reconciliation at relevant encounters;
  • Submit electronic data to immunization registries where required and accepted;
  • Provide electronic submissions of reportable lab results to public health agencies;
  • Provide electronic surveillance data to public health agencies according to applicable law and practice; and
  • Comply with federal and state privacy/security laws and the fair data sharing practices in HHS’ Nationwide Privacy and Security Framework, released in December 2008.
The HIT Policy Committee will make the final recommendations on meaningful use definitions to the Department of Health and Human Services and the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
HHS is mandated to publish an interim final rule for standards, implementation specifications and certification criteria of EHRs that qualify for financial incentives by the end of 2009. CMS will develop the formal definition of meaningful use to support the incentive programs. CMS will go through the full administrative rules process with a proposed rule, public comment period and a final rule. A timetable was not given.
The recommendations from the meaningful use workgroup include a matrix of objectives for 2011, plus enhanced objectives for 2013 and 2015. The workgroup will refine the initial recommendations for 2011 and 2013 within three months.
The meaningful use workgroup also has laid out an “achievable vision” for benefits to be realized by 2015. These include reductions in heart attacks, medical errors, and preventable hospitalizations.
For more information, click here. Scroll down and click on “meaningful use preamble” and “meaningful use matrix.” Updates from certification/adoption and information exchange workgroups also are available.

Friday, 23 July 2010

Meaningful use rule ‘on target’ for end of year


The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is still on target to publish by the end of the year a proposed rule on the meaningful use of electronic health records, despite growing fears from industry about the possible impact of the regulation.
Tony Trenkle, director of the Office of e-Health Standards and Services at CMS, said he had been spending a lot of time with health industry folks who have expressed “concerns and fears” about what will be in the regulation.
Those include how high the bar will be set for meeting meaningful use targets during the first year of implementation, and whether the industry will be able to meet them, he told a meeting today of National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS).
Other concerns include whether hospitals outpatient clinics would be eligible to receive separate payments, whether quality measures will disadvantage specialty health providers, and worries particularly by the states about whether CMS would be able to harmonize Medicare and Medicaid requirements.
Under the HITECH Act, a part of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act, health care providers can receive payments from both the Medicare and Medicaid programs if they can demonstrate meaningful use of certified EHRs. Payments are due to begin in 2011.
One of the major outcomes of the Nov. 19-20 NCVHS meeting is expected be a letter setting out recommendations to the Secretary of the Health and Human Services for measures that can be applied to decide on just what meaningful use is.
They include commissioning a “fast track” study from the Institute of Medicine on a national strategy for quality measurement development, to begin a process to identify essential data elements, to require EHR vendors to use defined quality data elements, and to require that any certified EHR be able to add data elements that may be defined in the future.
The NCVHS expects to release the final version of the letter at the Nov. 20 conclusion of its meeting.

Sunday, 20 June 2010

CMS encourages EHR use for Medicare quality reporting


Healthcare providers will have the option to use electronic health record systems to report Medicare quality and electronic prescribing measures to CMS in some of its pay-for-performance programs next year, according to an announcement by the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services.
The revisions are designed “to promote adoption and use of electronic health records and to provide both eligible professionals and CMS with experience on EHR-based reporting,” CMS said in the Oct. 30 announcement.
They run parallel to efforts by the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT to set up additional incentives for providers to measure and submit data measuring the quality of their treatments.
According to CMS, providers could use EHRs to submit information for the CMS’s Physician Quality Reporting Initiative (PQRI) program, which pays an incentive to eligible physicians and other healthcare professionals who report on specific quality measures for care for Medicare patients.
Providers also will be able to report e-prescribing usage through qualified EHR systems or registries, according to CMS. Currently, providers’ reports about e-prescribing are based on patient medical claims.
Under the fee schedule rule, providers for the first time will be able to count quality data submitted through electronic health record systems toward their eligibility for a PQRI incentive payment, CMS said.
Next year, those payments will be equal to 2 percent of their total estimated allowed charges for the reporting periods, CMS said. The final rule will appear in the Nov. 25 Federal Register.
The rule also streamlines reporting of e-prescribing and focuses on the actual use of e-prescribing by the provider. In 2010, providers will use one code for e-prescribing, but they “need to report this code at least 25 times during the reporting period to be considered a successful electronic prescriber,” CMS said.
The Medicare fee schedule puts into practice provisions of the Medicare Improvement for Patients and Providers Act of 2008, which established a program for incentive payments for e-prescribing over five years. In 2012, CMS will impose penalties on providers who are not “successful e-prescribers.”

Monday, 17 May 2010

CMS to allow EHR reporting for PQRI, e-prescribing bonuses in 2010


The new Medicare Part B fee schedule for 2010 is encouraging doctors to adopt EHRs by, for the first time, allowing practices to use real clinical data from EHRs and e-prescribing systems to report quality measures for the Physician Quality Reporting Initiative (PQRI) and e-prescribing incentive programs. The change, according to CMS, is “to promote adoption and use of electronic health records and to provide both eligible professionals and CMS with experience on EHR-based reporting,” Government Health IT reports.
Whether the incentive payments are large enough to spur many practices to switch to EHRs ahead of the 2011 debut of the federal stimulus program is uncertain, however. PQRI participants can earn 2 percent on top of their total Medicare Part B fees for reporting quality data in 2010, and another 2 percent for writing electronic prescriptions. The e-prescribing bonus drops to 1 percent in 2011 and penalties for not e-prescribing begin in 2012. CMS is trying to simplify reporting of e-prescribing by requiring a single code to be eligible for the bonus next year.