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Meaningful Use Patient Access and the Mask of the Red Death Even with the utterly lost, to whom life and death are equally jests, there are matters of which no jest can be made. –Edgar Allan Poe

Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

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Power Point presentation from MedStar CMIO Bootcamp 9-2-10

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Page 1: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

Meaningful Use Patient Access and the Mask of the Red Death

Even with the utterly lost, to whom life and death are equally jests, there are matters of which no jest can be made. –Edgar Allan Poe

Page 2: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

Hi, my husband received his diagnosis of renal cell carcinoma on March 27. At that point, I began to email, do Internet research, try to find every resource I could to help him. I began to Facebook--Facebooked every night daily, stating his status, developed over 200 friends and then began to Twitter, ended up speaking to a doctor from Boston, Mass. Did everything I could as a caregiver to support my husband using the Internet. Developed a blog. Also asked for Internet data. Prior to this I did not (often) email, nor did I use a cell phone. During a three month period (I) became complete caregiver and a walking PHR for my husband.

I am asking you how will the patient and patient advocate be allowed to access the information of (the) EMR, to have that a standardized form, that we all as advocates of our spouses or loved ones, (can) provide the best the best level of data and catch all kinds of errors in the medical record?”

-Regina’s Question to Aneesh Chopra 6-29-09

Page 3: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

“I applaud you for what you (are) doing with limited resources to try to help your family, but I am committed to making sure we have a foundation available so that clinicians on their own and by themselves and amongst themselves can start to have those kinds of transactions captured.”

-Aneesh Chopra,Chief Technology Officer and Associate Director of Technology

 I did not see patient access to the EMR addressed within his answer

I would paint a large mural called 73 Cents in the next three monthsto address this lack of patient access to the Electronic Medical Record.

Page 4: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

This is my husband’s medical record.I was told it would cost

73 Cents per page

and I would have to wait 21 days to get a copy.

Page 5: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

I have a favoriteInfusion pump.The Hospira pumphad different ring-tones for different problems. I loved the fact it would only allow staff to push the silence button a few times before an alarm would sound and a medical professional was forced to solve the problem.

I loved that pump so much that I painted it in to the picture.

One of my friends said it was the saddest part of our Story.

I loved this pump because it was technology that forced communication

Page 6: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

46 Ambulance Transports

Team Critical Care really cared, they did everythingThey could to ensure excellent care. They called to check on us, they talked me through the steps to complete a hospital transfer and they created transfer forms designed to stop insurance denials.

Page 7: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

Facebook: a way to goof off at work?

Facebook: a PHR with privacy issues?

Page 8: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

“Give Us our Dammed Data”What does Meaningful Use and HITECH have to do with patient safety?

Page 9: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

The Onion and The Orchid

While Fred was in hospice I wrote a very long letter to the first hospital Fred had been admitted to. This was the hospital that told me I could see his record after I paid 73 cents a page and waited 21 days. I sat next to my sleeping husband as he approached his death and calmly wrote a letter that referenced his medical record and provided dates and names and recounted the many types of harms this institution had inflicted upon Fred.

Why do this? I wasn't preparing to sue the hospital.

I wanted to inform the management of this facility of the problems we had encountered. I had hoped we could encourage a necessary change within the organization. I hoped to channel the grief and frustration I was feeling into some kind of positive outcome. I also wished to regain our dignity, for in the process of becoming victims we had lost our personhood.Patient Engagement can help the individual as well as the system……

Page 10: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

Do you know what sunk the Titanic?

It wasn’t an ice burg…

It was refusal to listen to wireless communication warnings.

Page 11: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

The Medical Reconciliation Report:

What has he been taking? What is that sitting in the open trash can? What are the warnings and side effects of this drug?

Why can’t patients access this? Why can’t we help

Page 12: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

“Have a seat, just throw those on the floor.”-Waitress May 2007

Death of the Paper Transfer

Page 13: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

If a child’s toy can figure any item in the world in 20 questions, whyCan’t we have CPOE and CDS in every hospital and family practice?

Why can’t a patient input their own data using medical app on a smart phone while waiting in office or prior to the appointment?

Page 14: Meaningful Use, Patient Access and Mask of the Red Death

A “Wordle” is a word cloud, the one pictured below is “CMS EHR Meaningful Use regulation 123009” by David Harlow of the HealthBlawg

Do you see the word patient? Let’s work on making that word bigger