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January 21, 2004
Connecting for Health Announces Commitment to create Incremental Roadmap for Achieving Electronic Connectivity in Health Care
New Partnership Announced Among Leading Health Care Foundations
New York- Connecting for Health, an extraordinary collaborative of public and private stakeholders, today
announced it will launch a continuation of its effort to promote electronic connectivity in the healthcare field
in order to improve patient care and lower costs while protecting patient privacy. At a meeting yesterday in New
York, the project's Steering Group, comprised of more than 50 leaders and decision makers in the health care
industry, renewed their commitment to advancing the use of electronic connectivity in health care. The critical
role of information technology in combating medical error and improving patient safety has been highlighted in the
past by the Institute of Medicine and most recently by President Bush in his State of the Union address. The
Steering Group also committed to create an incremental Roadmap to achieving electronic connectivity. The Roadmap
is necessary for prioritizing actions, fostering innovation and leveraging efforts across the public and private
sector. Connecting for Health, which was established by the Markle Foundation, also announced that the Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation would be joining Markle as a funding partner in the next phase of its work.
"The success of Connecting for Health's initial phase, which broke through the long-standing impasse
related to data standards, was based on finding achievable milestones and focusing on areas where we could
obtain consensus, which is how we are going to proceed now in developing our Roadmap," said Dr. Carol Diamond,
Managing Director at the Markle Foundation. "The real potential of this initiative however, rests on its
collaborative approach and the addition of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation illustrates the extraordinary nature
of Connecting for Health. The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation has a long and distinguished history of improving
health and health care in this country and we are honored to be partnering with them."
"Patients deserve to have a safe and reliable health care system that provides quality care. The only
way we're going to get there is if public and private sectors come together to create an interoperable electronic
infrastructure for healthcare," said John Lumpkin MD, MPH, Senior Vice President of the Robert Wood Johnson
Foundation and Chair of the National Committee on Vital and Health Statistics. "We'll need to put our
greatest efforts towards what we can all agree on and at the same time work towards common ground in areas where
we disagree."
Connecting for Health brings with it a continued commitment from many of the nation's foremost leaders in
the public and private sector. The Connecting for Health Steering Group, which met yesterday in New York, is
led by Daniel Garrett, vice president and managing director of Computer Sciences Corporation's Global Health
Solutions Practice; Herb Pardes, M.D., President and CEO, New York-Presbyterian Hospital; John Lumpkin, M.D.,
MPH, Senior Vice President for Health Care, Robert Wood Johnson Foundation; and Carol Diamond, M.D., MPH,
Managing Director, Markle Foundation's Information Technology for Better Health Program. Janet Marchibroda,
Executive Director of the Foundation for the eHealth Initiative serves as the Executive Director.
"We have an opportunity to bring the innovation and expertise of the private sector together with the
public sector to help drive our healthcare system toward a common goal of interoperable information technology
for patient safety and health care quality," said Dan Garrett, who was named an Executive Vice Chair of the
Steering Group. "This initiative is a unique opportunity to maximize the complementary expertise and experience
of the public and private sectors."
"The healthcare industry needs to be able to deliver information where and when it is needed in a
private and secure manner if we are to provide the best possible care to patients," said Herb Pardes, also
an Executive Vice Chair of Connecting for Health. "By acting collaboratively and decisively, I believe
that the next phase of Connecting for Health's work will bring us even closer to an interoperable healthcare
network that will lower costs and improve patient care while at the same time protect patient privacy."
The continuation of the Connecting for Health initiative comes as a result of strong support in the public
and private sectors for ongoing collaborative efforts that can catalyze action toward an electronic interoperable
health care information infrastructure so vital to addressing the safety, quality and effectiveness of health care
in this country. The first phase of Connecting for Health was a $2 million initiative supported by the Markle
Foundation. In next phase, Connecting for Health will have similar support from Markle and will also benefit
from the additional resources and expertise of the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation.
Connecting for Health will now build on the ground-breaking achievements of its earlier work by identifying,
tackling and testing solutions to the technical and policy barriers. Under a plan developed by the Steering
Group, Connecting for Health will accomplish its work through four new working groups and a demonstration project.
Specific goals of Phase II include:
1. A Roadmap detailing an action agenda of achievable objectives over the next twelve months that will
leverage activities between public and private healthcare sectors toward a health information infrastructure
that fosters innovation, encourages information sharing, and provides exchange of necessary health information
in a private and secure manner.
2. Challenging barriers that impede patient-centered information sharing within a series of Working Groups.
Specific areas of focus will be on understanding the business and organizational issues of community-based
information exchange, the issues relevant to sharing electronic information with patients, and certain aspects
of technical interoperability. (For more detail on the working groups, see www.connectingforhealth.org.)
The working groups and their leaders are:
- Working Group on Electronic Health and Personal Health Record chaired by: David Lansky PhD, president of
the Foundation for Accountability -FACCT.
- Working Group on Accurately Linking Health Information for Safety and Quality chaired by Clay Shirky,
Adjunct Professor New York University Interactive Telecommunications Program
- Expert Panel on Organizational Models and Financial Sustainability of Community-Based Health
Information Exchange chaired by David Brailer, MD, PhD, Senior Fellow for Information Technology and Quality
of Care at the Health Technology Center
- Expert Panel on Data Exchange Standards chaired by Wes Rishel, Vice President and Research Area Director,
Gartner and Past Chair HL-7
3. A Demonstration Project is planned to test and evaluate the working groups' products in real-world settings.
Background
Although one of every seven dollars spent on goods or services in the United States goes to health care, our
current system is highly fragmented and, in the words of the Institute of Medicine, lacks even "rudimentary" clinical information
capabilities. Vital data sits in paper-based medical records that can neither be accessed easily nor combined into an
integrated form to present a clear and complete picture of patient care. This information inadequacy is pervasive.
Everyone who uses the system constantly confronts large gaps in needed information, be it at the doctor's office,
the hospital or at government agencies charged with protecting public health.
The problem of adverse drug events alone represents a sizable opportunity for information systems. According
to an estimate from the Institute of Medicine (IOM), an estimated 770,000 people are injured due to adverse drug
events annually in the U.S and up to 70 percent of these incidents may be avoidable. According to the Center for
Information Technology Leadership, nationwide adoption of advanced computerized order entry systems in ambulatory
care could eliminate up to two million adverse drug events and 190,000 hospitalizations per year, and could save up
to $44 billion annually in reduced medication, radiology, laboratory, and hospitalization expenditures.
About Connecting for Health...a Public-Private Collaborative: Originally convened by the Markle Foundation in
September of 2002, the initiative had a nine month goal of serving as a catalyst for changes that would rapidly clear
the way for an interoperable health information infrastructure. It was designed to address the challenges of mobilizing
health information in order to improve quality, conduct timely research, empower patients to become full participants
in their care, and bolster the public health infrastructure.
- Built consensus on an initial set of healthcare data standards.
- Developed case studies of places where privacy and security practices may provide a model for others.
- Advanced our understanding of the consumer's role in an interconnected healthcare system by defining the personal
health record and its use.
Since Connecting for Health began its work in September of 2002, the importance of interoperability to
healthcare safety and quality has been publicly endorsed by leaders including President Bush, Secretary of U.S.
Health and Human Services Tommy G. Thompson, U.S. Food and Drug Administration Commissioner Mark B. McClellan
and a host of key stakeholder organizations including the American Hospital Association. Connecting for Health's
action-oriented agenda, meanwhile, has drawn wide support. For more information, see
www.connectingforhealth.org.
About the Markle Foundation
Emerging information and communication technologies possess enormous potential
to improve people's lives. The Markle Foundation works to realize this potential and to accelerate the use of
these technologies to address critical public needs, at present principally in the areas of healthcare and
national security. The Markle Foundation's overarching goal in the health area is to accelerate the rate at
which information technology enables consumers and the health system that supports them to improve health and
healthcare. The Foundation's goal is to ensure that the extraordinary potential of 21st century information
technology to improve the health and healthcare of each citizen is translated into everyday use as quickly and
as effectively as possible. For more information, see www.markle.org.
About the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation
The Robert Wood Johnson Foundation (RWJF) seeks to improve the
health and health care of all Americans. To achieve the most impact with our funds, RWJF prioritize grants
into four goal areas: to assure that all Americans have access to quality health care at reasonable cost; to
improve the quality of care and support for people with chronic health conditions; to promote healthy communities
and lifestyles; to reduce the personal, social and economic harm caused by substance abuse - tobacco, alcohol,
and illicit drugs. To accomplish these goals, RWJF use a variety of strategies. RWJF supports training, education,
research (excluding biomedical research), and projects that demonstrate the effective delivery of health care
and concentrates on health care systems and the conditions that promote better health. ###.
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