Going
by what some of the stalwarts of the industry feel, healthcare like
the education industry is more than a decade behind where it should
be in terms of adoption of technology. To say that it has had a
tremendous impact on the manner in which the industry goes about
offering its services would be an understatement. There is huge
amount of scope available for improvement in this field. However, the
irony lies in the fact that for real development to actually start
taking shape the current landscape needs to undergo a complete
change. The Healthcare industry now has too many players, of smaller
size, trying to grab a market which seems limited in terms of
innovations. Hence the expectations from these players is to deliver
high levels of services for less, which kind of in turn is bound to
put a lot of financial burden on them . As these vendors keep
jostling amongst themselves for a higher share of hospital market
which is kind of limited, the later on the contrary want less number
of vendors to deal with. This is simply because they want to be more
efficient in their operations and not run into a state where the
burden of handling multiple vendors takes a toll on their core job.
Thus the industry as it grows, which it must, will see a lot of
changes happening in the near future culminating in the presence of
fewer and efficient vendors offering a better ROI than what they do
now. A lot of mergers and acquisitions are not far away as we proceed
into the future.
What
Health IT systems do is that they equip doctors, hospitals, and other
providers to provide better coordinated care. They also ensure
reduction of errors and readmissions all of which result in costing
more money and leaving patients less healthy .The year 2012 proved to
be a windfall year for Healthcare IT with a record $1.2 billion
pumped into the sector through venture funding. While the major chuck
of the deals were in health information management, significant
investments seem to have been made in companies which focused on
consumers e.g. Mobile health, Telehealth, Personal Health etc.
The
first quarter of 2013 has also seen record investment in this field.
The trigger to all this was with the Obama government encouraging the
adoption of Health IT by passing the Recovery Act in 2009. In the
year 2011, the Medicare and Medicaid EHR incentive programs made it
possible for Doctors, hospitals, and other eligible providers to
incentives for adopting and meaningfully use certified electronic
health records. This move, as part of the Recovery Act, kind of
incentivized early adoption of EHRs which is critical for broader
healthcare Quality and efficiency improvement. It results in better
care coordination, reduction of duplicate tests and procedures and
finally rewarding hospitals for keeping patients healthier. The
results till date prove to be highly encouraging with more than half
of eligible professionals and 80 percent of eligible hospitals having
meaningfully adopted EHRs and received the incentive payout. This
trend is expected to up and lead to complete adoption by 2015 post
which the government has plans of penalizing the ones who fail to
comply with the mandate.
There
is however another concern which is quite grave that is showing along
with the wider adoption of EHR and it involves protection of patient
data contained in its electronic health record system. By rule, to
become eligible for the incentive payout, only those EHRs which are
certified need to be used meaningfully. But one also needs to take
into account the fact that finally the usage of the system has a
human element involved and that is where adequate training needs to
be given to the staff as well as monitor their access. There have
been a few instances were law suits have been filed by patients where
their data has been found to be compromised. This becomes a matter of
grave concern and requires all concerned stakeholders to take all the
requisite steps to ensure that such discrepancies are removed
completely. According to the U.S. Department of Health & Human
Services, 40 percent of large data breaches have involved laptop or
storage devices that have been lost or stolen.
Healthcare
software development
teams can help you build clinical and EHR/EMR software projects
within allocated budgets and time schedules.
We
provide clinical
software development
services. To know more about the expertise of our healthcare
software developers,
please visit Mindfire Solutions.
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