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NYC Mayor Proposes Prevention-Oriented Electronic Health Records

Feb 12, 2007, News Report

Bloomberg called for a new national goal: five years from today, every doctor's office, clinic, and hospital in America that accepts Medicaid and Medicare must be using prevention-oriented Electronic Health Records.

New York City Mayor Michael R. Bloomberg today called for a restructuring of how the United States pays for health care services in an address at the Academy Health National Health Policy Conference in Washington, D.C. In his prepared remarks, Bloomberg argued that the deepest failing of the current health care system is its emphasis on expensive treatments over preventive care that can be cheaper and often more effective. Bloomberg focused on the need for more widespread use of health information technology to support preventive care and reform health care financing.

"We've got a health care system that's not only breaking the bank, and not only leaving one out of six Americans uninsured, but which also provides decidedly ineffective care," said Bloomberg. "We have the most expensive and most advanced health care system in the world, yet we lag on such basic measures as life expectancy, and we fail to prevent death and disability for millions of Americans with common conditions such as high blood pressure and diabetes."

Bloomberg told conference participants that universal health insurance alone won't automatically lead to the health improvements, saying that, "We're paying for a disease care system, not a health care system. We must fundamentally reorder our priorities -- and start rewarding the primary and preventive care that keeps people out of hospitals in the first place."

Bloomberg spoke about the importance of information technology in health care and the role it can play in preventive care, detailing the successes that the New York City Health and Hospitals Corporation and the United States Department of Veterans Affairs have had implementing Electronic Health Records systems. To speed the pace of change, Bloomberg called for a new national goal: five years from today, every doctor's office, clinic, and hospital in America that accepts Medicaid and Medicare must be using prevention-oriented Electronic Health Records. Electronic Health Records, he said, will allow private insurers and Medicare and Medicaid to make meaningful measurements of physicians' performance, help them improve it, and recognize and reward them when they do.

"Today, most businesses, down to the smallest corner grocery store, have better information about their sales and inventories than even affluent medical practices have about their patients," Bloomberg said.

Comments

By Anonymous on Feb 21, 2007

Your comments have been brought to the attention of the appropriate people within the Bloomberg Administration, as we read Government Technology as well. Thanks.

By Cephus Allin on Feb 16, 2007

Medicare, under the SGR, is planning to decrease reimbursements by 25%-35% in the same time frame Mr. Bloomberg is referencing. Barry Straube of Medicare has a PowerPoint online which has a slide on his plan to fund a Medicare P4P initiative: 1) Overall reductions in reimbursement (SGR) and 2) Penalty for Performance. Budget neutral but will cause physicians to refuse to accept Medicare/Medicaid assignment, just shifting the burden to ERs and CHCs. The VA is not a positive example of EHR/EPM use in the real world. 1) The VA is funded by tax dollars. 2) The VA can spend $300 Million for accounting software that never works (CORE FLS) 3) The VA can forget about Iraq and Afghanistan and go to Congress for a 1.5 Billion bail-out 4) The VA's glowing numbers are "fixed." Look at page 5 of the OIG report on scheduling. 41% of the schedulers were advised to fix the numbers by their managers. Medicine is a business and a privilege. If the business fails, you lose the privilege. Physicians will stop seeing Medicare patients, just to survive. I would and I have always used EHR.

By Anonymous on Feb 13, 2007

I could not agree more! Medicare Executive, NYC

By Ed Dodds on Feb 13, 2007

Bloomberg Should Check Out The Medical Banking Project's Initiative http://www.mbproject.org/5MBI2007_Agenda.php

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