Health Information Exchange (HIE)
HDUs enable specific, defined use cases, with extra protections to ensure patient privacy and protection.
Three real-world data projects will be presented by the National Institutes of Health's Sarah Warner, Premier's Ning Rosenthal and Myla Maloney, and the University of Washington School of Medicine's Dr. Ferric Fang at HIMSS23.
At HIMSS23, Evelyn Gallego, CEO and founder of EMI Advisors, will highlight with fellow panelists the opportunity to develop a standardized data exchange to improve maternal care coordination and planning.
dbMotion is already live in southwestern Sydney in New South Wales.
Juan Nanez, a speaker at HIMSS23 and director of Programs at Paso del Norte Health Information Exchange, says when clinicians can access past patient history to guide decisions, hospital readmissions and ER visits decrease.
The New Jersey Health Information Network earns MED certification from CMS, while Ohio exchanges merge. After making mental health privacy changes, Oklahoma sends new HIE rules to state lawmakers.
To succeed, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention must overhaul the way data is collected and shared. Technology-driven collaboration will be critical to rebuilding the trust of agency partners.
Matt Doyle, R&D Team Lead & Software Development Team Leader for Interoperability at Epic, highlights the benefits of healthcare interoperability and how as a QHIN the company will simplify connectivity for providers.
The Ellison Institute is working to create a nationwide enterprise architecture for health data that includes clinical, public health and social determinants. Gabriel Seidman, the institute's director of policy, explains.
OCHIN will assist with planning and developing blueprints that school administrators can use to connect students with healthcare providers and counselors via real-time video conferencing.