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Rural physicians benefit
from federal funding
100 additional providers
will implement electronic health records
to improve rural health care quality,
lower costs, save lives
(Athens, OH)
The Ohio University Heritage College of
Osteopathic Medicine received $450,000
in federal stimulus funds to assist 100
primary care providers in southeastern
Ohio with implementing
electronic health records in their
practices.
“We are the first Regional Extension
Center (REC) partner in the state to
meet our goal, so we’ve been awarded
additional funding to assist an
additional 100 primary care providers,”
said Brian Phillips, chief of medical
informatics at OU-HCOM. Phillips is
referring to 404 primary care providers
who have already signed up to take part
in a technical assistance and training
program on implementing electronic
health records systems in their
practices.
Phillips said that the award funds the
OU-HCOM-led Appalachian Health
Information Exchange (AHIE), a voluntary
association of health care providers in
southeastern Ohio that seeks to develop
an advanced integrated health
information technology system to improve
the wellness of individuals, families
and communities and contribute to the
nationwide health information network.
In 2010, AHIE was one of seven regional
organizations in Ohio to receive federal
stimulus funds to assist in the
implementation of electronic health
records, with an ultimate goal of better
meeting state and national electronic
medical record initiatives. Of the $26.8
million provided to the seven sites
around Ohio, AHIE received $1.8 million
to assist 404 primary care providers in
19 southeastern Ohio counties.
OU-HCOM and AHIE are the first of the
organizations to sign up their total
number of providers in the program.
Primary care physicians – those who
practice obstetrics/gynecology,
pediatrics, family medicine or internal
medicine -- and nurse practitioners and
nurse midwives with the authority to
prescribe medications are eligible for
the assistance, he explained.
The additional funding comes from a pool
of redistributed funds of the original
funding grant,
said J. Mark Harvey, chief information officer of Hozler Clinic in
Gallipolis and chairman of the AHIE
board of directors. “We’re using the
funds to improve our use of the
electronic tools we have, so that we can
provide even better care at the least
possible cost.”
Providers who participate in the program
and meet a number of goals set by the
federal government known as “meaningful
use” – including signing a contract with
an electronic medical records vendor and
begin using such systems -- are then
eligible for additional funding via
Medicaid and/or Medicare programs.
“The providers who receive the
assistance – most of whom are all in
small, private practices -- do not have
the time or money to research various
vendors, options and systems,” Phillips
said.
Phillips noted that AHIE, whose members
include every major hospital and
hospital system in the region, has been
a pioneer in working towards development
and implementation of electronic health
records.
“The chief information officers and
executive administrators of the
hospitals were key in supporting our
vision by working together,” Phillips
said. “Our hospital partners played a
significant role in helping us meet our
goal. They are basically the leaders
within their own communities for health
care innovation.”
The ultimate goal, Phillips explained,
is to help the providers choose a system
that provides a patient’s medical
records with a centralized medical
“home.” Such a system would allow a
physician the ability to monitor overall
patient care, including referrals to
other health care specialists or
physicians, home health care and even
prescribing prescription drugs, he said.
In addition to enhancing the delivery of
medicine in our region, electronic
health records can provide information
about the health status in individual
communities and the region, Phillips
said. Such knowledge, he said, assists
the college in training the highest
quality primary care physicians. Also,
the information can be used to expand
research by OU-HCOM researchers to
create new approaches to improve
preventive health care and to treat
chronic diseases prevalent in the region
including diabetes, hypertension and
obesity. |