Until recently, whenever local hospitals discharged patients to members of the accountable care organization Quality Independent Physicians, fax machines began screeching and rumbling.
The hospitals needed to ensure doctors’ offices scheduled post-release visits within the government-mandated 14 days. And practices needed to determine the types of services patients required, from home health nurses to residential care. But the ACO realized that its old-school method of communication needed to change.
Faxes easily get lost, misdirected, or unread, noted Tom Samuels, CFO and CIO of Quality Independent Physicians, in an interview. As an ACO whose reimbursements are directly tied to savings and quality of care, Samuels knew the group had to improve communications between hospitals and its independent doctors across Louisville and Lexington, Ky., and Southern Indiana.
“The doctor may or may not be able to see that fax for two or three days and may not know about that patient’s discharge until after the fact,” he told us. “We were looking for a very simple solution to meet that communication need.”
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QIP physicians run their own practices, employing different electronic health records (EHRs) or in some cases still relying on paper files, says Samuels. Although QIP operates a CareEvolution health information exchange (HIE), that system was too complex for some users, and QIP was unable to track who had read or not read messages, he says. Hospitals sent information to both QIP’s HIE and doctors’ individual offices, but it is up to the physicians’ offices to plan each patient’s post-release care.
Samuels investigated HIPAA-certified secure messaging options, many of which were sophisticated programs sure to intimidate tech-shy physicians. He wanted simplicity and ease-of-use. Like most physicians, QIP’s medical professionals typically use a mix of iPhones and Androids to communicate in their personal lives. Samuels wanted something doctors could use on their own devices that met HIPAA security requirements. Unlike a desktop browser-based system, a mobile app gave physicians the mobility they demanded; texting provided the ease-of-use Samuels believed would encourage doctors to use the app.
He found that Red e App, a mobile app for private communications, met most of his requirements, including HIPAA security. Other apps he reviewed were too complex for his organization.
Date: April 14, 2014