Showing posts with label health. Show all posts
Showing posts with label health. Show all posts

Tuesday, April 9, 2013

The Healthcare Revolution Away From the Mainframe

Over ten years ago Intel launched the Proactive Health Research Project, a multiyear effort to bring ubiquitous computing to eldercare. Since that time Eric Dishman, an Intel Fellow and now general manager of the Health Strategy & Solutions Group, has been promoting healthcare innovation with a specific emphasis on home and community-based technologies and services for chronic disease management and independent living. He has often expanded on the concept initially proposed by Andy Grove in Fortune magazine where he described the "mainframe" era of healthcare. He said at the time, "It took us 50 years to move from the mainframe to personal computing, but health care needs to go through a similar transformation in ten years or less."

I riffed off of this a bit at the recent Dell Healthcare Think Tank entitled "The Future of Information Driven Healthcare," where I also described the launch of the HIMSS project within the Clinton Global Initiative, the Healthcare Transformation Project. With cloud services, mobile health technology and telemedicine advances, we may just be seeing a similar revolution in healthcare that the computer industry underwent. I think the Healthcare Transformation Project will help to spur this revolution...



Here is a TED Talk of Eric's where he discusses some of the ideas I referenced:

Monday, March 25, 2013

New Era Of Patient Engagement

On Wednesday, February 6, when Health Affairs held a briefing to discuss its February 2013 issue, "New Era Of Patient Engagement." In February's thematic issue of Health Affairs, authors from across the healthcare and policy spectrum explored the evidence on patient engagement; the challenges in changing the behavior of patients and providers; and the opportunities that exist to enhance patient engagement and activation in a transformed healthcare system. The briefing included some wonderful panels which can be view on the Health Affairs website. Two of the speakers that day were Lygeia Ricciardi and Jessie Gruman.

I read both articles (strange that An Accidental Tourist Finds Her Way In The Dangerous Land Of Serious Illness is open access while A National Action Plan To Support Consumer Engagement Via E-Health requires a subscription). The videos below from the briefing highlight the talks of Lygeia and Jessie. Lygiea points out how health IT and mobile technologies have created ideal conditions for the growth of patient engagement technologies. Jessie gives an overview of her compelling personal story and battle with cancer. She discusses how patient engagement is necessary to make the best use of care that is available to us.




Lygeia Ricciardi, Director, Office of Consumer eHealth, Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, US Department of Health and Human Services, on A National Action Plan To Support Consumer Engagement Via E-Health




Jessie C. Gruman, "Narrative Matters" Author, and President, Center for Advancing Health, on An Accidental Tourist Finds Her Way In The Dangerous Land Of Serious Illness

Thursday, March 21, 2013

Three Day Congressional Hearing Series On Potential Regulations of Mobile Apps

Subcommittee on Communications and Technology

The House Energy and Commerce Subcommittee on Communications and Technology, chaired by Rep. Greg Walden (R-OR), Tuesday kicked off the “Health Information Technologies” hearing series to discuss the critical role of technology in the health care industry and how federal regulations and taxes could impact patients, hinder innovation, and increase costs for consumers. In July 2011, the FDA proposed regulating mobile medical apps. In early March, committee leaders wrote to FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg seeking more information on possible FDA regulation of smartphones, tablets, and mobile apps through Obamacare's medical device tax, which could harm the innovation and economic benefits of the U.S. mobile marketplace.

“The collision of worlds in the mobile health – or mHealth – market is a study in contrasts. The app economy is characterized by low barriers to entry, quick time to market, and the ability to adapt to quickly changing user needs,” said Subcommittee Chairman Walden. “Medical devices, on the other hand, face a long and costly pre-market approval process at the FDA. We all want to ensure patient safety, but why would we treat mobile applications the same as a dialysis machine? Wireless has and can continue to bring the mobile revolution to our nation’s health and wellness sector. But we must ensure that as we bring the innovation of the wireless economy to health and wellness that we not place unnecessary hurdles in the way of the developers and investors that are fueling mHealth.”

Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton (R-MI) added, “Arbitrarily applying the definition of ‘medical device’ and the medical device tax to the wireless world could prove disastrous and grind this innovation cycle to a halt. We certainly want to ensure patient safety, but the approach we take must be a smart one.”

While protecting patient safety is a universal objective, innovators today expressed concern regarding the FDA’s failure to finalize the rule, the effects that overbroad application of the arduous medical device approval process would have on the ever-changing mobile app marketplace, and the deterrent to investment that would result from applying the medical device tax created by the president’s health care law. Despite claims from some Democrats that the ground rules for FDA regulation of mobile health applications are clear and that there is no risk applications, smartphones, or tablets will be taxed, all six of the witnesses said the situation is murky at best.

Dr. George Ford, Chief Economist at the Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal and Economic Public Policy Studies, explained that regulations could raise costs and hurt innovation, stating, “An inevitable and arguably intended effect of FDA involvement is to raise the cost of innovation and to alter the trajectory of innovation. Uncertainty, delays and the fixed costs related to the regulatory process reduce expected returns, and thus discourage firms from participating in the healthcare industry. As such, we must expect FDA review of mobile applications to slow innovation and to reduce competition.”

In response to a question from Chairman Walden, Jonathan Spalter, Chairman of Mobile Future, outlined the detrimental effects the 2.3 percent medical device tax would have on the mobile health app industry. Spalter explained, “These types of taxes, if they are applied to mobile medical applications and devices, will stifle innovation, will tempt entrepreneurs to pursue as you suggested other types of innovation, and apply their genius and their efforts to other parts of the mobile ecosystem rather than efforts to make our children, our families, our parents, healthier. So there is an impact, and we need to be very, very vigilant and cautious about going down this path.”



At the conclusion of the hearing, Rep. Renee Ellmers (R-NC) asked each witness if they could rule out the possibility that the medical device tax would hamper innovation and all six said they could not. Watch the exchange here.



Full hearing:is here:



Subcommittee on Health
On Wednesday, the Subcommittee on Health continued the hearing series with a look at “How Innovation Benefits Patients.” Members today focused on how innovative medical technologies can benefit American patients and discussed what steps need to be taken to foster innovation and growth. Providers and patient groups elaborated on how these technologies benefit patients and the impact FDA regulations would have on these medical advancements.

“There are now mobile medical apps for wireless thermometers, apps that calculate body mass index, apps that track the number of miles a runner has jogged and those that can wirelessly transmit data to wearable insulin pumps,” said Chairman Pitts. “These apps can range from the complex, like mobile cardiac outpatient telemetry that uses wireless sensors, to those that allow users to count calories. It has been estimated that 500 million people will be using medical apps by 2015. Therefore, it goes without saying that these technologies hold great potential for patients and providers. This hearing is an appropriate place to examine the extent to which the FDA – and other federal agencies – should be involved in regulation of health information technologies and what such a regulatory framework might look like.”
In July 2011, the Food and Drug Administration proposed regulating medical applications. This month, committee leaders wrote to FDA Commissioner Margaret Hamburg seeking more information on whether FDA intends to regulate smartphones, tablets, and mobile apps and whether it would be trigger the 2.3 percent medical device tax included in the president’s health care law.

Joseph Smith, Chief Medical and Chief Science Officer for the West Health Institute, testified before the subcommittee that the healthcare industry's innovation and experimentation requires a "clear, consistent and timely approach" to regulation. "It is an open question whether the existing medical device regulatory framework can be sufficiently modified to provide the applicability, clarity, predictability and timeliness required," Smith told lawmakers. "The FDA's draft guidance on mobile medical apps offered some improved clarity but still described significant areas of regulatory discretion, and now after lengthy delay without becoming finalized, has left an industry in limbo."

Witnesses discussed whether the FDA has the expertise to regulate medical applications and health information technology.The witnesses seemed to agree that under the current framework they do not have the expertise to regulate beyond medical devices. David Classen, M.D. Chief Medical Information Officer, Pascal Metrics cited the IOM report saying that "if the FDA were to get further involved in the oversight of health IT beyond medical devices a new framework.to do that should be created." Dr. Joseph Smith, Chief Medical and Chief Science Officer for West Health Institute, stated, “I think it’s quite challenging for the FDA, for many reasons, to stay as current as possible on those things which are simply just emerging.”



Also, Mr. Jim Bialick, Executive Director for the Newborn Coalition discusses the potential for additional barriers to entry for medical app developers if FDA regulates medical apps.He provided every day examples of how lives are being changed through the application of these new medical technologies. “Not everybody is born in a city center so access to some of these remote home monitoring devices is very functional. Not only that but the telemedicine capacity that we are seeing especially through some of these devices has really expanded. As someone said in the hearing yesterday, it’s the new house call.".He further raised additional concerns voiced at Tuesday’s Communications and Technology Subcommittee hearing that the uncertainty surrounding FDA’s draft guidance could stifle innovation, stating, “The threshold for a blockbuster app is gigantic now, I mean it’s millions of dollars. And so even to get the investment now to let’s say you’re going to develop it beyond just in your garage and have a large scale launch. The concern that you’ll have the potential for, or if it’s known that, you’ll have additional regulation on top of that cuts out the bottom line. So there’s an investment side to it to.” Rep. Morgan Griffith (R-VA) concluded, “So they’re more likely to try and find the next angry bird than the next angry mole.”



The full hearing is here:



Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations
On Thursday, the Subcommittee on Oversight and Investigations heard from HHS and FDA as the final heaing in the series with a look at Administration Perspectives on Innovation and Regulation.”

Dr. Farzad Mostashari, National Coordinator of Health Information Technology, gave testimony saying, "To truly transform delivery, health care providers must also redesign and reengineer workflow of care. This does not happen overnight. Health IT holds tremendous promise for delivering “smart health” to patients right at their fingertips to help all of us achieve the best possible outcome for each individual. We must carefully balance the need for the widest innovation possible, with protection of patient privacy, security, and safety." Dr. Mostashari stated that one of the challenges encountered in adoption and improvement of Health IT has been the lack of interoperability between individual Health IT systems, as well as between Health IT systems and medical devices. He explained that improvements in interoperability would greatly advance use of Health IT. When asked what ONC is doing to overcome this challenge, he noted that they are using every tool at their disposal to increase sharing of information. In the meantime, ONC is working with industry to establish standards that would improve interoperability  He said that ONC’s 2014 certification standards for Electronic Health Records represent a step forward in solving these issues.

Also providing testimony was Ms. Christy Foreman Director, Office of Device Evaluation, Center for Devices and Radiological Health at the FDA. She said: “Just as importantly as what our policy proposes is what our policy does not propose. It would not regulate the sale or general consumer use of smartphones or tablets. It would not consider entities that exclusively distribute mobile medical apps, such as the ‘iTunes App store’ or the ‘Android market,’ to be medical device manufacturers. It would not consider mobile platform manufacturers to be medical device manufacturers just because their mobile platform could be used to run a mobile medical app regulated by FDA. It would not require mobile medical app developers to seek Agency re-evaluation for minor, iterative product changes. And, it would not apply to mobile apps that perform the functionality of an electronic health record (EHR) system or personal health record system.”

But the stated intent of an agency doesn't always hold up over time, suggested Morgan Griffith (R-Va.). "In regard to the questions that--the list of examples that Waxman listed out, while the FDA does not currently have any plans, do you believe that the FDA could, if it so chose to do so, regulate those examples down the road if it had a change of heart?" Griffith inquired.

Foreman allowed that the FDA, acting under its statutory authority in the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act, could, but that it would require compelling evidence of a health risk to do so. "We have no intent to," Foreman said. "The only thing that would change our mind is if there was a strong safety signal, that we became aware of a device that we were not regulating appropriately under enforcement discretion, but not regulating it. That would cause us to reconsider our position. But absent strong safety signals, no, we would not change our mind."



The full hearing is available here:



The prepared testimony from witnesses and opening statements from each of the hearings are as follows:

Health Information Technologies: Harnessing Wireless Innovation

Opening Statements: 
Witnesses: 
Robert Jarrin
Bradley Merrill Thompson
Ben Chodor
Jonathan Spalter
T. Forcht Dagi, MD, MPH, DmedSc
Dr. George Ford
  • Chief Economist
  • Phoenix Center for Advanced Legal and Economic Public Policy Studies
  • Witness Testimony
Health Information Technologies: How Innovation Benefits Patients


Witnesses: 
Joseph M. Smith, M.D., Ph.D.
Jacqueline Mitus, M.D.
  • Senior Vice President, Clinical Development and Strategy 
  • McKesson Health Solutions
  • Witness Testimony
Mr. Jim Bialick
Ms. Christine Bechtel
David Classen, M.D.
  • Chief Medical Information Officer, Pascal Metrics
  • Associate Professor of Medicine and Consultant in Infectious Diseases 
  • University of Utah School of Medicine
  • Witness Testimony


Health Information Technologies: Administration Perspectives on Innovation and Regulation


Witnesses: 
Dr. Farzad Mostashari
  • National Coordinator
  • Health Information Technology
  • U.S. Department of Health and Human Services
  • Witness Testimony 
Ms. Christy Foreman
  • Director, Office of Device Evaluation, Center for Devices and Radiological Health
  • Food and Drug Administration
  • Witness Testimony

Saturday, March 16, 2013

The High Price of Healthcare

Steven Brill, Giovanni Colella, M.D., and Ezekiel Emanuel, M.D. Ph.D. examined how to lower the high price of healthcare at a recent Center for American Progress event, "The High Price of Health Care" on March 13, 2013. Steve Brill's widely cited Time cover story exposed a “uniquely American gold rush” for hospitals, pharmaceutical companies, and medical device makers at the expense of patients and payers. After analyzing healthcare bills and interviewing patients, hospital executives, and billing advocates, Brill found that patients and other healthcare purchasers are charged ridiculous prices, with markups as high as 10,000%. I agree that transparency in pricing and engaging patients are key to actually reducing healthcare costs.

Leading experts in the field of healthcare joined the Center for American Progress to develop a plan to address the crisis of rising healthcare costs. The 11 cost-containment solutions were the subject of a New England Journal of Medicine article, authored by 23 prominent health care experts, including Dr. Ezekiel Emanuel, former administrator of the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services Dr. Donald Berwick, former director of the Office of Management and Budget Peter Orszag, and Center for American Progress President Neera Tanden. There was some interesting alignment between the NEJM article and Brill's piece. The Center for American Progress hosted this panel discussion with opening remarks by Tanden and moderated by Topher Spiro, Vice President of Health Policy at the Center for American Progress. The video below is from the event, the infographic below that was created by Maura Calsyn, Emily Oshima Lee, and Danny Schwaber.


INFOGRAPHIC: