What is Interoperability?

2
4010, Moorpark Avenue, #205, San Jose, California 95117 April25, 2014 In the simplest of terms, Interoperability is the ability of making disparate systems talk to each other. The basic purpose of enabling interoperability is information exchange. Defining interoperability from a healthcare standpoint, HIMSS tells us that “Interoperability is the extent to which systems and devices can exchange data, and interpret that shared data. For two systems to be interoperable, they must be able to exchange data and subsequently present that data such that it can be understood by a user.” There are various players in the healthcare industry. This includes patient, provider, payer, lab, clinician, hospital and pharmacy. Between all of them, the amount of information that gets created is mind-boggling. And all of this is generated with the goal of providing better care. Thus, the goal of interoperability is to create an environment where software applications can communicate, exchange and make use of the information without worrying about which software is used by the end-user. An interoperability system has different components. Each of these components is a critical piece of the interoperability puzzle and plays an integral part in ensuring seamless exchange of information. What are these components? Clinical Data Exchange A clinical data exchange handles the electronic transfer of information This eliminates traditional methods like faxing and introduces a simple and secure messaging platform. This also enables providers qualify for ARRA incentives. Revenue Cycle Management Manages treatment plan eligibility and benefits. Generates patient statements and keep track of claim status. Patient Engagement Patient engagement is a key Meaningful Use criterion. This enables patients and doctors to connect with each other. Patient engagement includes scheduling, reminders and ability of the patient to reach out to the doctor to seek clarification in the treatment plan. Provider Portal The provider portal contains the entire medical history of a patient even when the patient moves across different hospitals. Providers irrespective of the EHR system they use have access to patient information anytime, anywhere. What is Interoperability?

description

There is a lot of buzz around healthcare interoperability? But what exactly does is mean and what are the components of Interoperability?

Transcript of What is Interoperability?

Page 1: What is Interoperability?

4010, Moorpark Avenue, #205, San Jose, California 95117

April25, 2014

In the simplest of terms, Interoperability is the ability of making disparate systems talk to each other. The basic purpose of enabling interoperability is information exchange. Defining interoperability from a healthcare standpoint, HIMSS tells us that “Interoperability is the extent to which systems and devices can exchange data, and interpret that shared data. For two systems to be interoperable, they must be able to exchange data and subsequently present that data such that it can be understood by a user.” There are various players in the healthcare industry. This includes patient, provider, payer, lab, clinician, hospital and pharmacy. Between all of them, the amount of information that gets created is mind-boggling. And all of this is generated with the goal of providing better care. Thus, the goal of interoperability is to create an environment where software applications can communicate, exchange and make use of the information without worrying about which software is used by the end-user. An interoperability system has different components. Each of these components is a critical piece of the interoperability puzzle and plays an integral part in ensuring seamless exchange of information. What are these components? Clinical Data Exchange

A clinical data exchange handles the electronic transfer of information

This eliminates traditional methods like faxing and introduces a simple and secure messaging platform.

This also enables providers qualify for ARRA incentives.

Revenue Cycle Management Manages treatment plan eligibility and benefits.

Generates patient statements and keep track of claim status.

Patient Engagement Patient engagement is a key Meaningful Use criterion.

This enables patients and doctors to connect with each other.

Patient engagement includes scheduling, reminders and ability of the patient to reach out to the doctor to seek

clarification in the treatment plan.

Provider Portal The provider portal contains the entire medical history of a patient even when the patient moves across different

hospitals.

Providers irrespective of the EHR system they use have access to patient information anytime, anywhere.

What is Interoperability?

Page 2: What is Interoperability?

4010, Moorpark Avenue, #205, San Jose, California 95117

Provider portal ensures increased care coordination by ensuring the updated information is shared across the

healthcare continuum.

About ViSolve

ViSolve,Inc. is a software services and consulting firm with expertise in Healthcare and Cloud. ViSolve is headquartered at San Jose, CA with best in class Development & Support center in Coimbatore, India.To know more about how ViSolve can enhance your IT capabilities, get in touch with us:

Website:www.visolve.com

Email:[email protected]

Twitter:@ViSolve_Inc

Google Plus: plus.google.com/+ViSolveUSA

Facebook:facebook.com/ViSolve

LinkedIn:www.linkedin.com/company/visolve-inc