David Kibbe

EHR, HIE and Meaningful Use Conference in Las Vegas

I’m really excited about a meaningful use and EHR conference that’s being held literally in my backyard. It’s the Inaugural Digital Medical Office of the Future: Driving Toward Meaningful Use Conference and Exhibition. The conference is scheduled for September 9-10, 2010 at Green Valley Ranch in Las Vegas, NV. You can see more details at the EHR conference website . The whole conference seems really well done and should have a great mix of EHR, EMR, Meaningful Use and HIE topics. I’m personally most excited to hear the famous Mark Anderson from the AC Group speak in person. Our paths have crossed a number of times in the digital world, and so I’m excited to meet him in the physical world. I also noticed that David Kibbe is on the agenda. Both are legends in the EMR and EHR world which should make for an extraordinary time. If any EMR and HIPAA readers plan to attend, it would be fun to meet you in person. Maybe we could do an EMR and HIPAA dinner or something. It’s always fun to meet readers of the site in person. Full Disclosure: I’ve been given press access to the conference and exchanged the ad you see in the right sidebar for EMR and HIPAA listed in the conference materials. Related posts: Blogger-Twitter Meetup at HIMSS Annual Conference I’m getting very excited about the HIMSS Annual Conference. As... Virtual Healthcare IT Conference by HIMSS One night this week I decided to take a look... EMR Stimulus, Selection and Implementation Conference I’ve started talking with some people about putting together an...

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by HealthRotate - August 12, 2010 at 3:27 pm

Categories: AC Group, David Kibbe, EHR, EHR Conference, EMR, EMR Conference, Electronic Health Record, Las Vegas, Mark Anderson   Tags: , , , , , , , , ,

ONC Standards Make CCHIT Process Irrelevant

FierceEMR has really hit the healthcare IT arena in force over the past 6 months. They even have a big party planned for HIMSS. I’ll probably be stopping by since it’s the day after the New Media Meetup at HIMSS . Well, one of my favorite healthcare IT writers, Neil Versel wrote an article for FierceEMR that really caught my eye. It was titled, “Kibbe: New ONC standards make CCHIT process ‘irrelevant’” If you’ve read this blog for any time you know that I’m an enormous fan of CCHIT (that was in the sarcasm font in case you couldn’t tell). I even declared the Marginalization of CCHIT back in July of last year. So, obviously I agree with David Kibbe’s assertion that the CCHIT process is irrelevant thanks to the HITECH act. A section of the article linked above describes some of the major problems with CCHIT: Kibbe long has said the CCHIT certification process discourages innovation by being too complicated and costly for new, small companies that otherwise might shake up the EHR market with lower-priced, easier-to-use products. He also has held that the certification body was too closely tied to the health IT establishment. “CCHIT in effect acted as judge and jury for its own industry’s definition of EHR software, inhibiting alternative approaches that would embrace component or modular architectures, web-based delivery also known as ’software-as-a-service,’ and practical means of achieving interoperable data exchange between applications from different vendors,” he says in a recent blog post. No doubt the CCHIT criteria is no longer meaningful. The only problem is that a question still haunts my mind, “Did we just move the flawed process from CCHIT to ONC?” Related posts: CCHIT Task Force Process I was reading through a short article entitled “CCHIT TASK... Article on Open Standards Here’s a very interesting article on open standards and let... Marginalization of CCHIT EHR Certification If you’ve read this blog for any time, you know...

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Be the first to comment - What do you think?  Posted by HealthRotate - February 22, 2010 at 4:29 pm

Categories: ARRA, CCHIT, CCHIT Certification, Certified EHR, Certified EMR, David Kibbe, EHR, EHR Vendors, EMR, Electronic Health Record, HITECH, HealthCare IT, Neil Versel, ONC   Tags: , , , , , , , ,