Building blocks
Contractors enlist to help build a national health network ? one piece at a time.
Officials responsible for constructing the
Nationwide Health Information Network
are relying on numerous information technology
contractors for assistance as they
embark this month on an initiative to connect
regional health information exchanges.
Contractor support is expected to expand
further in the next several years as federal
and state officials strive to link the nine
regional information exchanges, federal and
industry officials said. The initiative eventually
will involve all 50 states.
"The Nationwide Health Information
Network will be a secure network: a network
of networks," said John Loonsk, director of
interoperability and standards at the Health
and Human Services Department's Office of
the National Coordinator of Health
Information Technology, which is overseeing
development of the network. He said
that federal officials hope to show how the
regional networks can link to one another by
September 2008.
The national network has been in the
planning and demonstration phase for at
least three years and is expected to provide a
foundation for electronic medical records by
2014. Some basic hurdles remain to be overcome.
For example, it is not yet clear
whether patients and physicians will accept
electronic records as sufficiently private and
accurate. More than 80 percent of medical
records are on paper.
Officials also need to standardize formats
and terminology for the exchanges. And
some technology issues are still being debated,
such as which information should reside
in a secure network and which should be
stored on a computer chip or card carried by
the patient.
Burst of activity
But a flurry of activity and contracts in
recent months suggests that the national
network idea is gaining traction. HHS
Secretary Mike Leavitt announced contracts
Oct. 5 totaling $22.5 million to nine
health information exchanges in California,
Delaware, Indiana, New Mexico, New York,
North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia and
West Virginia. Those exchanges will
begin operating and linking with one
another in a nationwide network.
The major IT contractors supporting
those efforts include:
- CGI of Fairfax, Va.,announced Oct.
24 that it has been selected as the
lead systems integrator for connecting
CareSpark's regional
health information network in
Tennessee and Virginia with the
national network. - Computer Sciences Corp. announced Oct. 15 it is supporting
the New York eHealth
Collaborative for the implementation
of the national network.
CSC estimates the value of the
contract, which has a one-year base
and two one-year options, to be
$3.5 million if all options are exercised. - IBM Corp. said earlier this year that it had developed a standards-based
system based on
a service-oriented
architecture to connect
information
exchanges for the
national network.
IBM has installed and
operated the solution at
the Duke University
Health System and six
other hospitals as part of
the North Carolina
Healthcare Information and
Communications Alliance.
IBM said it had used
open-source software from
openEMR.org and products
from subcontractors Allscripts
LLC, of Chicago; BioImaging
Technologies Inc., of Newtown,
Pa.; GE Healthcare, of the United
Kingdom; Healthvision Inc., of
Irving, Texas; Initiate Systems Inc.,
of Chicago; McKesson Corp., of San
Francisco; MediTech Inc., of Westwood,
Mass.; and SureScript Systems Inc., of
Alexandria, Va. - Medicity Inc. of Salt Lake City and Perot
Systems Corp. teamed on a contract to create
the Delaware Health Information
Network as part of the national network.
The first phase of the project involves
three hospitals, several physician offices
and a clinical laboratory network. The
companies also are working together,
along with Hewlett-Packard Co., to create
a health information exchange in San
Francisco that is not yet part of the
national network.
Multiple challenges remain
Staff writer Alice Lipowicz can be reached at
alipowicz@1105govinfo.com.
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