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Moving from a
pen and paper
system to a 21st
Century world.
NANCY L. JOHNSON |
The
legislative
agenda
developed by
the suburban
caucus is
meant to
address our
everyday
concerns:
the safety
of our
children at
school,
congested
and
overcrowded
roads, and
dwindling
open space,
for
instance.
At the
very top of that
agenda is health
care. Seniors
enjoying their
retirement,
couples raising
children, and
individuals in
the suburbs face
barriers to
quality,
affordable
health care.
Overcoming
these barriers
and improving
our overall
health care
system requires
the adoption and
use of
electronic
medical records
and
“e-prescribing”
systems. Health
care information
systems can save
lives, improve
the quality of
care, and lower
costs. While
the health care
we receive in
the suburbs is
state-of-the-art,
the way
patients,
physicians,
pharmacies and
other providers
record, retain,
and securely
exchange health
information is
not. It’s a pen
and paper
system. Without
new technologies
and digital
information
systems, health
care quality
cannot take the
next leap
forward.
Consider that
a person rushed
to an emergency
room may not get
the best
treatment
because their
private records
are locked in a
physician’s
office across
the street - and
not available to
the emergency
room doctor
treating them in
a potential
crisis such as a
car accident, a
heart attack or
serious
infection. An
interoperable
health
information
system would
make accurate
health
information
available to us
and our doctors
when we need
it. We know the
consequences of
a pen and paper
system. A
landmark U.S.
Institute of
Medicine study
from 1998 found
that preventable
medical errors —
such as misread
hand-written
prescriptions —
caused as many
as 100,000
deaths in
America each
year, far more
than even motor
vehicle
accidents.
Lost or
incomplete
medical records
cost the health
system billions
and the economy
millions more in
lost time at
work. Some
estimates put
just Medicare’s
cost for
duplicative
testing at $5.4
billion a year.
Suburban
families bear
these costs for
themselves and
for Medicare and
Medicaid
beneficiaries as
well.
Despite its
promise for
better health
care at lower
cost, widespread
adoption of
electronic
health records
and information
systems has been
disappointingly
slow. The
current system
of overlapping
or conflicting
state and
federal laws is
complicated and
not designed for
an era in which
records can be
transmitted
electronically
anywhere,
accurately and
securely.
That is why I
introduced
legislation to
help develop a
health
information
technology
system with
uniform privacy
and security
standards. My
legislation,
supported by 41
bipartisan
co-sponsors,
will enhance
privacy
protections and
allow for the
secure health
information
systems we
deserve in the
digital age. And
it helps
hospitals and
doctors’ offices
to coordinate so
everyone uses
health
information
systems that can
talk to each
other.
And as suburban
families change
jobs, it
requires their
health insurance
to change with
them.
Consumer-controlled
plans like
Health Savings
Accounts (HSA)
are portable,
and can be
brought with you
from job-to-job.
With the benefit
of using pre-tax
dollars, HSAs
can go to pay
for things
employer plans
may not cover —
like braces for
our kids. But
greater use of
HSAs requires
another major
improvement in
our delivery of
health care:
more information
available to the
individual on
the quality of
care providers
deliver and the
price they
charge.
Medicare and
some of the big
employers are
leading the way,
developing
specific
measures of
quality and
publicly
reporting
provider
performance. As
Chairman of the
House Ways and
Means Health
Subcommittee, I
will continue
working to
improve care
quality and to
empower our
families to be
better health
care consumers.
Of course,
improving the
quality of our
health care
would be in vain
if suburban
families cannot
afford that care
in the first
place. I was
proud to offer
the law creating
the state
children’s
health insurance
plan (SCHIP) in
the House, and
it has made
health care more
affordable and
accessible for
millions of
children in the
last nine years.
In the short term,
however, we can
do more to make
sure all
children
eligible for
public safety
net health
programs like
SCHIP are
enrolled in
them. Studies
show that
families of
these children
are not aware
that these
programs are
available to
them. Along with
Dr. Bill Frist
in the Senate, I
have introduced
in the House the
“Covering Kids
Act,”
legislation
authorizing $100
million in
federal grants
to states,
schools,
community and
non-profit
groups to
conduct the
creative
outreach that we
know works.
For suburban
families with so
often two
parents working,
the goal of
maintaining
family health,
minimizing work
disruptions and
preventing
illness can be
far more
effectively
accomplished
with advanced,
broadly
disseminated
health
information and
health care that
is more portable
and affordable.
Concerns about cost
and quality
demand that we
continue working
to make such a
system a reality
for families in
every community
across America.
RF
Nancy Johnson
represents the
5th District of
Connecticut
in the U.S.
House of
Representatives. |
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