Vest Joshua R, Kash Bita A
Indiana University Richard M. Fairbanks School of Public Health at IUPUI.
National Science Foundation Center for Health Organization Transformation and Texas A&M Health Sciences Center.
Milbank Q. 2016 Mar;94(1):77-108. doi: 10.1111/1468-0009.12180.
Community health information exchanges have the characteristics of a public good, and they support population health initiatives at the state and national levels. However, current policy equally incentivizes health systems to create their own information exchanges covering more narrowly defined populations. Noninteroperable electronic health records and vendors' expensive custom interfaces are hindering health information exchanges. Moreover, vendors are imposing the costs of interoperability on health systems and community health information exchanges. Health systems are creating networks of targeted physicians and facilities by funding connections to their own enterprise health information exchanges. These private networks may change referral patterns and foster more integration with outpatient providers.
The United States has invested billions of dollars to encourage the adoption of and implement the information technologies necessary for health information exchange (HIE), enabling providers to efficiently and effectively share patient information with other providers. Health care providers now have multiple options for obtaining and sharing patient information. Community HIEs facilitate information sharing for a broad group of providers within a region. Enterprise HIEs are operated by health systems and share information among affiliated hospitals and providers. We sought to identify why hospitals and health systems choose either to participate in community HIEs or to establish enterprise HIEs.
We conducted semistructured interviews with 40 policymakers, community and enterprise HIE leaders, and health care executives from 19 different organizations. Our qualitative analysis used a general inductive and comparative approach to identify factors influencing participation in, and the success of, each approach to HIE.
Enterprise HIEs support health systems' strategic goals through the control of an information technology network consisting of desired trading partners. Community HIEs support obtaining patient information from the broadest set of providers, but with more dispersed benefits to all participants, the community, and patients. Although not an either/or decision, community and enterprise HIEs compete for finite organizational resources like time, skilled staff, and money. Both approaches face challenges due to vendor costs and less-than-interoperable technology.
Both community and enterprise HIEs support aggregating clinical data and following patients across settings. Although they can be complementary, community and enterprise HIEs nonetheless compete for providers' attention and organizational resources. Health policymakers might try to encourage the type of widespread information exchange pursued by community HIEs, but the business case for enterprise HIEs clearly is stronger. The sustainability of a community HIE, potentially a public good, may necessitate ongoing public funding and supportive regulation.
社区健康信息交换具有公共物品的特征,并支持州和国家层面的人群健康倡议。然而,当前政策同样激励医疗系统创建自己的信息交换系统,覆盖范围更窄的特定人群。不可互操作的电子健康记录和供应商昂贵的定制接口阻碍了健康信息交换。此外,供应商将互操作性成本强加给医疗系统和社区健康信息交换系统。医疗系统通过资助与自身企业健康信息交换系统的连接,创建了由目标医生和医疗机构组成的网络。这些私人网络可能会改变转诊模式,并促进与门诊服务提供者的更多整合。
美国已投入数十亿美元鼓励采用和实施健康信息交换(HIE)所需的信息技术,使医疗服务提供者能够高效且有效地与其他提供者共享患者信息。医疗保健提供者现在有多种获取和共享患者信息的选择。社区健康信息交换系统促进区域内广泛的医疗服务提供者之间的信息共享。企业健康信息交换系统由医疗系统运营,在附属医院和提供者之间共享信息。我们试图确定医院和医疗系统选择参与社区健康信息交换系统还是建立企业健康信息交换系统的原因。
我们对来自19个不同组织的40名政策制定者、社区和企业健康信息交换系统领导者以及医疗保健高管进行了半结构化访谈。我们的定性分析采用一般归纳和比较方法,以确定影响参与每种健康信息交换方式及其成功的因素。
企业健康信息交换系统通过控制由期望的贸易伙伴组成的信息技术网络来支持医疗系统的战略目标。社区健康信息交换系统支持从最广泛的医疗服务提供者那里获取患者信息,但对所有参与者、社区和患者的益处更为分散。虽然不是非此即彼的决策,但社区和企业健康信息交换系统争夺时间、技术人员和资金等有限的组织资源。由于供应商成本和技术互操作性不足,两种方式都面临挑战。
社区和企业健康信息交换系统都支持汇总临床数据并跟踪不同医疗机构的患者。虽然它们可以相互补充,但社区和企业健康信息交换系统仍在争夺医疗服务提供者的关注和组织资源。卫生政策制定者可能会试图鼓励社区健康信息交换系统所追求的那种广泛的信息交换,但企业健康信息交换系统的商业案例显然更强。社区健康信息交换系统作为一种潜在的公共物品,其可持续性可能需要持续的公共资金和支持性监管。