Wednesday, June 13, 2012

Top CEOs offer checklist for better healthcare

WASHINGTON – Some of the nation's top healthcare CEOs have issued a 10-item checklist for spurring high-value healthcare that includes health IT best practices.

The checklist is part of a discussion paper the CEOs authored that bears the emblem of the Institutes of Medicine. However, it also carries a disclaimer that the views expressed in the discussion paper are not necessarily those of the authors’ organizations nor of the IOM.

[See also: IOM to release new report on health IT and patient safety]

"The Checklist’s 10 items reflect the strategies that, in our experiences and those of others, have proven effective and essential to improving quality and reducing costs," the authors write.

On the topic of IT, they state: “Reliable information systems are critical not just to ensure care quality, but also to improve efficiency in administrative and other process measures.”

In keeping with their precept of “continuous improvement,” the CEOs ask themselves and their senior leaders these questions about IT:How well is our IT system used to help providers streamline administrative tasks and improve the care experience and patient outcomes?How well is our EHR aligned with meaningful use requirements?

[See also: IOM finds healthcare data for children lacking]

They also present examples of how IT best practices resulted in better care and millions in savings at their organizations.

At Geisinger Health System, for example, IT helped lower costs over the past five years, saving $1.7 million from reduced chart pulls; more than $600,000 from reduced printing and faxing; more than $500,000 per year from reduced nursing staff time through ePrescribing; and more than $1 million from reduced transcription.

The checklist and a list of the authors and their affiliations are on the next page.

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