Hospitals cannot rely on IT vendors to comply with federal healthcare IT regulations, which include a variety of rules besides the "meaningful use" standards in the HITECH Act, according to a Health Data Management news report.
Some vendors may fail to comply with certain regulations, including HIPAA privacy/security provisions, conversion to HIPAA 5010 transaction sets and ICD-10 code sets and the health care reform law. All of these provisions are expected to substantially change internal functions for hospitals, particularly workflows and processes that effect revenue cycle management.
"You must be planning for the convergence of these initiatives and their affect on technology, processes and people," said Deborah Kohn, principal at Dak Systems Consulting in San Mateo, Calif.
Read the Health Data Management report on Ms. Deborah Kohn's opinion.
Read other coverage on healthcare IT:
- Survey Suggests CIOs "Cautiously Optimistic" About Qualifying for Stimulus Funds Under HITECH Act
- Hospitals Forced to Shift IT Priorities to Meet Federal Requirements
- Only 2% of Hospitals Can Meet New Federal EMR Standards
Some vendors may fail to comply with certain regulations, including HIPAA privacy/security provisions, conversion to HIPAA 5010 transaction sets and ICD-10 code sets and the health care reform law. All of these provisions are expected to substantially change internal functions for hospitals, particularly workflows and processes that effect revenue cycle management.
"You must be planning for the convergence of these initiatives and their affect on technology, processes and people," said Deborah Kohn, principal at Dak Systems Consulting in San Mateo, Calif.
Read the Health Data Management report on Ms. Deborah Kohn's opinion.
Read other coverage on healthcare IT:
- Survey Suggests CIOs "Cautiously Optimistic" About Qualifying for Stimulus Funds Under HITECH Act
- Hospitals Forced to Shift IT Priorities to Meet Federal Requirements
- Only 2% of Hospitals Can Meet New Federal EMR Standards