Welcome to Health Care POV | sign in | join
The XY Files in an MT World

Society For Exorbitantly Expensive And Difficult To Implement EHRs (SEEDIE)

Published November 10, 2008 11:58 AM by Jay Vance
Someone alerted me to this spoof website and I got a big kick out of it.  It's a great followup to my last post regarding implementing an electronic health records (EHR) system in this country.

From the website's "SEEDIEspeak" page:

SEEDIE invites industry insiders to provide commentary on the value of certification on our blog. The following post is from Brantley Whittington, CEO of EHR vendor Extormity.

Much is made these days in healthcare IT circles about interoperability. This so-called "holy grail" has lulled many into believing that EHR systems should be able to easily and inexpensively exchange data using standard communication protocols.

Our company, Extormity, sells a suite of EMR software solutions, and we can't keep all the acronyms straight! I can't explain the difference between an HL7, a CCR and an XPHR, and I do this for a living! In fact, we tried to participate in some interoperability exhibitions at a few conferences, and we couldn't make our systems talk with those from other vendors. We also took a look at CCHITSM Certification, and quickly realized there was no way we could meet 263 criteria in 40 some categories. We're all for certification, but what's wrong with setting the bar low? Why does CCHIT have to make certification so rigorous?

We threw up our hands and decided to work with other like minded vendors to start our own organization - SEEDIE. This "take our ball and go home" approach puts the power where it belongs - in the hands of a few very large, very profitable companies who know how to build the complex, proprietary systems required to turn the EHR space into a multi-billion dollar market in a short period of time.

Is interoperability a pipe dream? Absolutely not.

Is interoperability expensive? We think it should be! We believe that true interoperability requires organizational will and a tremendous amount of money from customers to fund it. Given enough in custom integration fees, we can build an interface that will allow our EMR to exchange clinical data with a toaster oven. It all boils down to dollars and desire.

EHR vendors who tout plug and play interoperability are eroding the potential value of the healthcare IT market. Look for the SEEDIE seal when you select an EHR partner, and you will know with confidence that your added investment will support aggressive industry growth forecasts.

Whoever the author of this website is, I absolutely agree with him or her that we're making the whole EHR compatibility/interoperability issue much more complicated than it has to be.  If we're really serious about cutting costs in health care, rejecting expensive proprietary systems in favor of open-source software and established file formats would be a logical place to start.

0 comments

leave a comment



To prevent comment spam, please type the code you see below into the code field before submitting your comment. If you cannot read the numbers in the image, reload the page to generate a new one.

Captcha
Enter the security code below:
 

Search

About this Blog


    Jay Vance, CMT
    Occupation: Medical Transcription Industry Consultant
    Setting: Yuma, AZ
  • About Blog and Author

Keep Me Updated