See the actual post for an idea about clinicians seeking indemnification when forced by healthcare organizations to use bad health IT. I can attest to actually seeing HIT policies that call for "human resources actions" if clinicians refuse to use HIT, or cannot learn to use it at a sufficient pace.
(Left out of this reiteration is the demonstration on photographing problematic EHR screens. See the post for the details - it is easy to do, even with a commodity cellphone.)
HHS should be promoting laws on protection from retaliation upon clinicians reporting problems in good faith.
Thus, physicians, nurses and other clinicians can create needed health IT transparency and help our society discover the true level of risks of bad health IT. They simply need the right information on what to do and where to report, bypassing the ONC office and, in the spirit of medicine, taking such matters into their own hands in the interests of patient care and medical ethics.
I also made recommendations to the Pennsylvania Patient Safety Authority on how known taxonomies of health IT-related medical error can be used, and need to be used, to promote error reporting in common formats. Slides from my presentation to the Authority entitled "Asking the Right Questions: Using Known HIT Safety Issues to Improve Risk Reporting and Analysis", given in July 2012 at their invitation, are at http://www.ischool.drexel.edu/faculty/ssilverstein/PA_patient_safety_Jul2012.pptFinally, another sign of progress: unlike the HITECH Act, this new ONC plan is open to public comment.
-- SS
Addendum Jan. 8., 2012:Dr. Halamka has put more details regarding his views in his blog. The entry is entitled "
Electronic Health Record Safety" at this link:
http://geekdoctor.blogspot.com/2013/01/electronic-health-record-safety.html .He writes:
... Some have questioned the wisdom of moving forward with EHRs before we are confident that they are 100% safe and secure. [That, of course, is not my argument - nothing is ever 100% safe and secure. However, we don't yet know just how safe and secure - or unsafe and insecure - HIT is. That is the issue I am concerned about - ed.] I believe we need to continue our current implementation efforts.
I realize it is a controversial statement for me to make, but let me use an analogy.
When cars were first invented, seat belts, air bags, and anti-lock brakes did not exist. Manufacturers tried to create very functional cars, learned from experience how to make them better, then innovated to create new safety technologies. many of which are now required by regulation.
Writing regulation to require seat belts depended on experience with early cars.
My grandmother was killed by a medication error caused by lack of an EHR. My mother was incapacitated by medication issues resulting from lack of health information exchange between professionals and hospitals. My wife experienced disconnected cancer care because of the lack of incentives to share information. Meaningful Use Stage 2 requires the functionality in EHRs which could have prevented all three events.
I express my condolences on those events.
I disagree, however, with continuing national implementation efforts at the current rate, with penalties for non-adopters. I opine from the perspective of believing health IT has not reached a stage where it is ready for national rollout and remains experimental, its magnitude of harms admittedly unknown and information flows systematically impaired. I recommend and prefer great caution under those circumstances, and remediation of those circumstances before full-bore national implementation.
I will leave it to the reader ponder the two views.
-- SS