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Nov. 15 - Moving Interoperability Into Practice, HIMSS EHRVA Releases Quickstart Guide for CCD Standard Recognizing the benefits of interoperability in healthcare, the HIMSS Electronic Health Record Vendors Association (EHRVA) has released its Quick Start Guide for the ASTM/HL7 Continuity of Care Document (CCD) standard. The association developed the guide, which is available at no charge here on the EHRVA website, as a resource to help hasten interoperability in healthcare. "We created the Quick Start Guide as a resource to expedite further adoption of the CCD standard because our members recognize interoperability as both an EHRVA and industry goal," said Jack Smyth, EHRVA communications work group co-chair and president and CEO of Spring Medical Systems in Houston, Texas. "We believe this standard can help move interoperability ahead." To develop the guide, several EHRVA members worked collaboratively with Alschuler Associates, LLC, an independent consulting firm that also developed the Clinical Document Architecture (CDA) Quick Start Guide and, in conjunction with the EHRVA, the CDA/CRS Quick Start Guide and CDA Validator. Smyth explained that the vendors group has worked in conjunction with other organizations to help this standard evolve. "We are proud of those efforts because we feel it has helped focus our current involvement with the Certification Commission for Health Information Technology (CCHIT), Health Level Seven (HL7), Health Information Technology Standards Panel (HITSP) and Integrating the Healthcare Enterprise (IHE)." "Through the volunteer efforts of organizations such as the HIMSS EHRVA, the standards development process of HITSP continues to be successful," said Dr. John Halamka, chair of HITSP, and CIO of Harvard Medical School. "With EHRVA member companies of all sizes working to implement the HITSP specifications in their products, the road to nationwide interoperability should be easier to navigate." Results of an EHRVA member survey taken in June also indicated that 76% of the association's members expected the CCD to be required in the 2008 CCHIT criteria." "Interoperability represents one of the founding objectives of CCHIT," said Smyth, "and the CCD standard simplifies the path to interoperable electronic health records." Announced in February 2007, the Continuity of Care Document represents collaboration between HL7 and ASTM International, which are two standards development organizations. The CCD standard has been recognized by many in the industry as a catalyst to interoperability because it:
"As an association, we want to ensure better healthcare," said Don Schoen, chair of the EHRVA and CEO of ambulatory EHR provider MediNotes in Des Moines, Iowa. Schoen also noted the sensitivity to the size of EHR vendor companies. "We want to ensure an easy and effective way for companies of any size to understand, develop and implement this standard." Schoen further commented that the EHRVA recognizes the CCD standard as one of the easiest and most essential components of communicating healthcare data between providers. "Achieving interoperability in healthcare demands the cooperation and expertise of all of us in the industry," said H. Stephen Lieber, CEO/president of the Healthcare Information and Management System. "The EHRVA's CCD Quick Start Guide offers a valuable resource and reference that will contribute to the accelerated adoption of health IT." To educate interested users of the guide, HIMSS and the EHRVA will provide instructional materials both online and through teleconferences. Visit http://www.himssehrva.org to review and download the EHRVA Quick Start Guide for the Continuity of Care Document. Source: HIMSS
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