CCHIT: Momentum building in EHR incentive funding

The Certification Commission for Healthcare Information Technology (CCHIT) has found that momentum is building behind incentives for physicians to adopt EHRs in their medical practices.

In the commission’s first search for programs that have sprung up to subsidize physician adoption of health IT over the past two years, the commission found 90 initiatives in the public and private sectors.

The 90 programs in the CCHIT Incentive Index catalog represent at least $700 million in potential funding for EHR software and implementation costs. Of those programs:
  • 50 have been launched by hospital organizations in response to federal “safe harbor” regulations announced in 2006. Under those rules, hospitals can subsidize up to 85 percent of certain costs for physicians to acquire, implement and maintain EHRs which are CCHIT certified for their offices; and
  • 40 incentive programs are being offered by government agencies, insurance plans, employer coalitions and public-private partnerships, of which 20 explicitly call for CCHIT-certified technology.
“As we dug deeper to research the real impacts of certification, the results surprised us, as we found many more incentive programs—and more funding—to be available than we expected at this point,” said Mark Leavitt, MD, PhD, CCHIT chair. “Although we started our first certification in ambulatory care just two and a half years ago, we’re already seeing evidence of a major redirection of investment toward adoption of EHRs in that setting.”

Around the web

GE HealthCare designed the new-look Revolution Vibe CT scanner to help hospitals and health systems embrace CCTA and improve overall efficiency.

Clinicians have been using HeartSee to diagnose and treat coronary artery disease since the technology first debuted back in 2018. These latest updates, set to roll out to existing users, are designed to improve diagnostic performance and user access.

The cardiac technologies clinicians use for CVD evaluations have changed significantly in recent years, according to a new analysis of CMS data. While some modalities are on the rise, others are being utilized much less than ever before.