It was a pleasure to work with you, as you and your team made this process a more pleasant experience for our team and the participants.
Several groups have offered recommendations for CMS' proposed rule for Stage 3 of the meaningful use program, Clinical Innovation & Technology reports (Walsh, Clinical Innovation & Technology, 5/29).
Under the 2009 economic stimulus package, providers who demonstrate meaningful use of certified electronic health records can qualify for Medicaid and Medicare incentive payments.
The comment period for the Stage 3 proposed rule closed on Friday.
Under the proposed rule, all eligible professionals beginning in 2018 would report on Stage 3 of the meaningful use program regardless of their previous participation. Providers would have the option to move to Stage 3 starting in 2017 (iHealthBeat, 5/28).
In a letter, the American Medical Association called on CMS to address current program issues before moving on to the next stage.
The association made several recommendations should CMS choose to continue with the Stage 3 transition in 2018, including:
Meanwhile, the American Medical Informatics Association said that the transition to the Merit-based Incentive Payment System established by the repeal of Medicare's Sustainable Growth Rate formula would be "highly burdensome while offering only modest gains" under the proposed Stage 3 rule (Pittman et al., "Morning eHealth," Politico, 6/1).
In comments submitted last week, the Healthcare Information and Management Systems Society emphasized the importance of interoperability and the meaningful use program's role as a "critical tool for enabling health care transformation."
HIMSS also said that it supported CMS' efforts to align the meaningful use program with other CMS quality reporting programs that use certified EHR technology, citing the proposal's potential to ease the burden on providers.
However, HIMSS recommended that CMS:
In its own comments, the Medical Group Management Association also expressed concerns over the current state of the proposed rule.
MGMA said that the meaningful use "program has become a significant administrative burden and is proving to be counterproductive."
The group recommended that the proposed rule be "substantially modified" and urged CMS to delay finalizing the Stage 3 rule until:
MGMA also encouraged CMS to:
Meanwhile, the American Hospital Association in a letter to National Coordinator for Health IT Karen DeSalvo applauded the 2015 Edition Health IT Certification Criteria proposed rule for its provisions to:
However, AHA also urged the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT to increase transparency and the reliability of certified health IT through:
Linda Fishman, senior vice president of public policy analysis and development at AHA, wrote, "While this may narrow the scope of a final 2015 Edition rule," it also could "improve both the ability of vendors to develop technology in conformance with certification requirements and the ability of providers to successfully implement technology to meet regulatory requirements" (AHA News, 5/29).
It was a pleasure to work with you, as you and your team made this process a more pleasant experience for our team and the participants.
I just want to tell you that I value people relations more than money. I remember how you were friendly and helpful not going against policies and contractual obligations at the same time, not using your power to make us feel stupid and small. It was a very rare and big experience for me. Really. I will always remember this.
The Usability People are all individuals that you can become friends with very easily. They have a lot of different interests and are a pleasure to work with. I was writing a PRD/MRD for a billing solution and worked with The Usability People in defining the user interface. They are receptive to ideas and are able to mold the user interface from an end-user's perspective. I really liked the idea of putting end-user photograph & short biography around the office to help understand the users