ONC and Misdirection Regarding Mass Healthcare IT Failure In my keynote address to the Health Informatics Society of Australia in Sydney recently, I cautioned attendees including those in government to be wary of <a href="http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2012/03/doctors-and-ehrs-reframing-modernists-v.html" target="_blank">healthcare IT hyper-enthusiast</a> misdirection and logical fallacy (a.k.a. public relations).<br /><br />In the LA Times story "<a href="http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-hospital-data-outage-20120803,0,5302779.story?track=rss&cid=dlvr.it&dlvrit=52116" target="_blank">Patient data outage exposes risks of electronic medical records</a>" on the Cerner EHR outage I wrote of in my post "<a href="http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2012/08/massive-health-it-outage-but-of-course.html" target="_blank">Massive Health IT Outage: But, Of Course, Patient Safety Was Not Compromised</a>" (the title, of course, being satirical), Jacob Reider, acting chief medical officer at the federal Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology is quoted. He said:<br /><br /><blockquote class="tr_bq">"These types of outages are quite rare and there's no way to completely eliminate human error." </blockquote><br />This is precisely the type of political spin and hyper-enthusiast misdirection I cautioned the Australian health authorities to evaluate critically.<br /><br />As comedian Scott Adams <a href="http://www.leany.com/logic/Adams.html" target="_blank">humorously noted</a> regarding irrelevancy, a hundred dollars is a good price for a toaster, compared to buying a Ferrari. <br /><br />Further, when you're the patient harmed or killed, or the victim is a family member, you really don't care how "rare" the outages are.<br /><br /><i><b>Airline crashes are "rare", too. </b></i>So, shall they just be tolerated as a "cost of doing business" and spun away?<br /><br />(As I once wrote, the asteroid colliding with Earth that caused the extinction of the dinosaurs was a truly "rare" event.) <br /><b><br /></b>It seems absurd for me to have to point out that paper, unless there is a mass outbreak of use of disappearing ink, or <i>locally hosted</i> clinical IT, <b>do not go blank en masse across multiple states and countries for any length of time,</b><b> raising risk across multiple hospitals </b><b>greatly, </b><b>acutely and simultaneously. </b>Yet, I have to point out this obvious fact in the face of misdirection.<br /><br />Locally hosted health IT, of course, can only cause "local" chart disappearances. "Local" is a relative term, however, depending on HC organization size, as in the example of a Dec. 2011 regional University of Pittsburgh Medical Center (UPMC) 14-hour outage affecting thousands <a href="http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2011/12/yet-another-glitch-affecting-thousands.html" target="_blank">here</a>.<br /><br />Further, EHR's and other clinical IT, whether hosted locally or afar, had better offer truly <i><b>major</b></i> advantages, <i><b>without</b></i> major risks and disadvantages, over older medical records technologies before exposing large numbers of patients to an invasive IT industry and the largest unconsented human subjects experiment in history.<br /><br />Unfortunately, those basic criteria are not yet apparent with today's systems (see for instance this <a href="http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2011/02/updated-reading-list-on-health-it.html" target="_blank">reading list</a>).<br /><br />EHR's and other clinical IT, forming in reality an <i><b>enterprise clinical resource management and clinician workflow control apparatus</b></i>, have introduced new risk modes including mass <a href="http://hcrenewal.blogspot.com/2012/06/more-electronic-medical-record-breaches.html" target="_blank">chart theft</a> (sometimes tens of thousands in the blink of an eye); also, mass chart disappearances as in this case - all not possible with paper.<br /><br />At the very least, if hospitals want enterprise clinical resource management and clinician workflow control systems, these should not be relegated to a distant third party.<b> Patients are not guinea pigs upon whom to test the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Application_service_provider" target="_blank">ASP software model</a> ("software as a service") that, upon failure for any reason, threatens their lives.</b><br /><br />Finally, these complications are a further example why this industry cannot go on without meaningful oversight. The unprecedented special medical device regulatory accommodations must end.<br /><br />-- SS ONC and Misdirection Regarding Mass Healthcare IT FailureIn my keynote address to the Health Informatics Society of Australia in Sydney recently, I cautioned attendees including those in government to be wary of healthcare IT hyper-enthusiast misdirection a… Đọc thêm » 08 Aug 2012