eweekchat

Next-Gen Health Care IT
JOIN US: This is a chat-based conversation about advancements in next-generation health-care IT, including new collaboration tools, AI and telemedicine.
   5 years ago
#eweekchatTrends in Data OrchestrationJOIN US: This is a chat-based conversation about how batch processing, while still being used pretty extensively, is nonetheless being eclipsed by newer methods of making data work inside IT systems.
   5 years ago
#eweekchatThe Home as Enterprise BranchJOIN US: This is a chat-based conversation about COVID-mandated changes in the workplace, including security, networking, collaboration tools--and working far too much using Zoom and Webex.
Chris Preimesberger
We've 8 mins left, how about some final thoughts and perhaps some takeaways you got from this session?
Sanjeev Agrawal
I am excited to see like minded folks working hard on problems that are important. There is so much to do in healthcare analytics, that having bright minds and $$ spent solving these problems with data is really quite exciting - being selfish here for my kids
Mike Seegel
Understand what risks you are trying to mitigate, develop a plan on how IT can best get you the reportable data around those risks. Once you have the data, don't just let it lie; use it to make better decisions.
Sanjeev Agrawal
Thanks for having me - it was great to meet you all!
Aditya Bansod
two key from me from this fun discussion today: (1) data and interop is so critical to healthcare -- collecting, connecting, and analyzing data in a HIPAA safe manner; (2) how do we ensure the innovations we create keep patients at the center of experience
Chris Preimesberger
[Sidebar note: A very cool feature of CrowdChat, BTW, is that you can save this conversation link and all the brainpower that went into it. Also a great way to know who knows what on this topic for reference.]
Chris Preimesberger
Q6: What can health care IT do in the present time to better recognize another pandemic before it happens?
Sanjeev Agrawal
A6: Stopping viruses or their mutation won't be easy but certainly responding to any such outbreak and containing it can be facilitated with tech like Digital epidemiological surveillance and rapid case identification
Sanjeev Agrawal
A6: Also hoping this pandemic pushes rapid population level vaccine deployment and population level home testing (or even water effluent testing programs)
Mike Seegel
I think the ability to gather data (as we were discussing with handhelds) can help predict overall trends that are happening.
Sanjeev Agrawal
With mutations - being quickly track and trace the spread of a mutation and map the vaccine that will be most effective against the variant and then deploy it before the variant becomes the dominant strain (like we do with the flu)
Mike Seegel
The gathering of data is only the start; what do you do with the data next? Metrics, actionable reporting and the like will translate the data into useful information.
Mike Seegel
@saagrawa It would be ideal if we could share data like this, but the problem is there are issues with sharing data (geopolitical, HIPAA regulations, GDPR, etc.) that prevents a lot of sharing data.
Kenya Smith
Q6. Health IT can develop analytic dashboards to make it easier to analyze data and identify trends.
Mike Seegel
@KenyaSmith_NC That's a perfect way to get the data and be able to make better decisions for your organization, and the patient.
Chris Preimesberger
Last question coming up, Q6 ... before we ask for some concluding comments ...
Chris Preimesberger
Q5: How do you believe telemedicine is going to continue to develop? What will we be able to do in the future that we don't do now?
Sanjeev Agrawal
A5: Personally I think we will settle into a hybrid world where some demand will be shunted to Telemedicine but it's hard to replace for example some Oncology appointments in person
Sanjeev Agrawal
A5: However second opinions, skin conditions, other less "I need to see / touch, examine the patient" conditions can move far more effectively online. Maybe with imaging that can be read online we could do even more.
Sanjeev Agrawal
A5: And if Michio Kaku is right and we all walk around with a hand held $100 MRI machine maybe we can do everything online!!! :)
Mike Seegel
Q5: Sadly, I think telemedicine is starting to put the onus of diagnosis on the patient. In other industries, such as food, being able to customize your order the way you want can be beneficial. Requiring the patients to do more is problematic.
Chris Preimesberger
Good point, Mike. Telemedicine is a two-interaction; ordering takeout is one-way. Big difference
Aditya Bansod
A5: I've been thinking a lot recently with telehealth in the context of health maintenance. as remote monitoring tools (like CGMs, etc) continue to get better, appts with diabetic educators, A1c checkins, etc will get even more valuable as a remote capability
Mike Seegel
@saagrawa A5: I agree some exciting innovations are coming, but I think it might actually degrade our level of healthcare. I could be wrong, as perhaps medical professionals could maybe focus on higher level tasks than before.
Sanjeev Agrawal
A5: To @adityabansod's point - all these watches and devices we wear can be really quite helpful for maintenance, a form of virtual health checkups
Aditya Bansod
A5: I think one major innovation that will happen in remote healthcare (broader context than just telehealth) will be as continuous glucose monitors become the standard instead of finger pricks. once we solve the mountain of data they generate, it'll be a huge step
Kenya Smith
A5. I see an expansion of telemedicine in more acute settings. i.e ICU
Chris Preimesberger
How so, Kenya? Can you offer a little more detail?
Chris Preimesberger
Q5 on the way ...
Chris Preimesberger
Q4: How best can IT best provide completely clean health-care data to practitioners on a real-time basis?
Aditya Bansod
A4 LOL this reminds of me of the XKCD comic: there are 15 competing standards. we need one universal standard! ... how there are 16 competing standards.

https://xkcd.com/927/
https://xkcd.com/927/
Standards
Standards
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial 2.5 License.
Sanjeev Agrawal
A4 I agree with @adityabansod and am hopeful FHIR will be adopted more broadly and extended in it's definitions
Mike Seegel
A4: Good question Chris! The first question IT needs to ask with what problem am I trying to solve? You need to know what risk that you're trying to address first. Developing or purchasing software without a clear path creates more problems than it solves.
Sanjeev Agrawal
A4: also hopeful that walled gardens will be less so - reading and writing to multiple systems with a common framework would make life so much easier for everyone for sure. Seems like a "tooth fairy" like concept at this point though
Mike Seegel
A4: Once you know what risk you're addressing, then you can target what data you actually need from the system. The best way is to start with actionable metrics, such as the amount of vulnerabilities remediated within 30 days, over a span of a year.
Aditya Bansod
A4 I really want to believe that FHIR is going to be as close as we get to one solution for the universe, but having now implemented 80+ EHRs @lumahealthhq and implementing all the major EHR's FHIR implementations ...
Mike Seegel
Then, you can develop or acquire the system that best suits your reporting needs. Having a clear project management path normally helps problems of purchasing systems that don't interoperate, and ending up with a bigger problem then you started with.
Aditya Bansod
A4 ... we end up having a distinct FHIR implementation per EHR. And on top of that, there are ~3 versions of FHIR in the wild. so i'd say it's "better" than where we were 5 years ago but it's not great by any means in terms of getting access to clean or real time data.
Chris Preimesberger
Q4 coming up ...
Chris Preimesberger
I'd like to invite each of our guest experts to give us a high-level overview of what their companies offers here in this sector. Go for it!
Sanjeev Agrawal
@LeanTaaS we enable hospitals to do more with less - see more patients at lower cost with less wait by improving the utilization of their existing assets
Sanjeev Agrawal
We do this by matching supply and demand of these assets (both of which are stochastic by nature) in a much more mathematically precise way than EHRs can
Aditya Bansod
thanks @editingwhiz! we @lumahealthhq provide a full EHR-integrated platform to help engage, communicate, guide, and retain patients at all points of their care journey. needing care is hard, getting access to care shouldn't be.
Mike Seegel
Schellman offers a wide range of compliance audits and assessments, such as HITRUST, HIPAA assessments, SOC 1 & 2, ISO (many varieties), CMMC and the like. If you need IT Compliance, we most likely have what you're looking for!
Chris Preimesberger
[A note to the full audience: If you're following the discussion on Twitter, I invite you to join the live discussion here on CrowdChat.net/eweekchat. That way, if you want to add a comment, you can do it. We're not going to see you otherwise!]
http://CrowdChat.net/eweekchat
[LIVE CHAT] Next-Gen Health Care IT
[LIVE CHAT] Next-Gen Health Care IT
JOIN US: This is a chat-based conversation about advancements in next-generation health-care IT, including new collaboration tools, AI and telemedicine.