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eHealth Insider

May 2006

eHealth Insider May 2005; Volume 7, Number 5
Harvard Pilgrim Streamlines Claims Management From All Sides...Study Cites that CPOE Reduces Medication Prescription Error Rates, But At the Lowest Level of Severity...Medication Error Analysis For Computerized and Paper Records...CPOE Usage is Higher in Hospitals...AHIC Panel Addresses Strategies To Support Health Information Technology Adoption...About AHIC...and more...

HARVARD PILGRIM STREAMLINES CLAIMS MANAGEMENT FROM ALL SIDES
Harvard Pilgrim Health Care (Quincy, MA) does not look at claims in isolation, but rather as part of an entire process of a provider rendering a service and then obtaining reimbursement.

THIRD ANNUAL WORLD HEALTH CARE CONGRESS EXAMINES HIT INITIATIVES
Advances in collecting and using patient information to more proactively and effectively treat patients was one of the many health information technology topics that industry leaders tackled during the third annual World Health Care Congress held in Washington, DC, April 17-19.

STUDY: CPOE REDUCES MEDICATION PRESCRIPTION ERROR RATES
Medication prescription error rates were eight times lower when physicians used computerized physician order entry as opposed to writing drug orders in the intensive care unit of a tertiary university hospital, according to research published in the January 26 issue of the journal Critical Care.

CPOE USAGE IS HIGHER IN HOSPITALS
Recent surveys of CPOE usage found that 32% of hospitals had a CPOE system but only 13.7% required physicians to use it, according to the Center for Information Technology Leadership (Wellesley, MA).

Q&A: AHIC PANEL ADDRESSES STRATEGIES TO SUPPORT HEALTH CARE INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY ADOPTION
A major concern with developing interoperability rules for a national health information network is the compatibility among all the demands for measurement, reporting and health services.


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