For the past six months, James Spurlock, a solo family physician and part-time emergency physician in Woodbury, TN, has
had access to a web-based, statewide health record that covers all of his Tenncare (Medicaid) patients, who form 40 percent
of his rural practice. Provided for free by Shared Health, a subsidiary of Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Tennessee that contracts
with Tenn-care, this "Community Connection" health record includes visit data (based on submitted claims), test results, ED
information, and medication lists.
Spurlock says that the Community Connection "can save some time" by alerting him to tests and procedures that other physicians
have already ordered or performed on his patients, so that he doesn't have to order them again. The community record also
lets him know which patients are seeing other doctors of whom he's unaware. Among other things, that can help him catch patients
who are "shopping" for controlled substances.
Having a complete drug list available for each patient is also useful, he says. "It helps me to find out what medications
new patients are taking even before I get records from another physician. It also helps to see how frequently they're refilling
their prescriptions. If they're not using their medications properly, I can pick up noncompliance."
In Cincinnati, a community-based organization called Health- Bridge has been supplying internist Mila Gracanin with online
lab results and other reports from her hospitals for the past three years. The best part of this free service, says Gracanin,
is that she can access the results from anywhere and view them online when she needs to. "All of those records don't have
to be pulled, so it cuts down on the amount of work my staff has to do." Gracanin wishes her reference labs were also on HealthBridge and that she could order tests through the web portal. At least
the latter wish may soon be fulfilled, says James Gravell, chairman-elect of HealthBridge and executive vice president of
Mercy Health Partners, one of the participating healthcare systems.
Wesley V. Eastridge, a family physician in Gate City, VA, has similar hopes for a community-wide electronic network based
in nearby Kingsport, TN. The nonprofit organization that's planning this network, known as CareSpark, has raised nearly $600,000
in seed money from local physician groups, hospitals, health plans, employers, community organizations, and the Foundation
for eHealth Initiative, a private group that controls disbursement of some government grants. CareSpark's ambitious goal is
to get most local doctors to adopt EHRs and to link their systems with a community portal that would also include hospitals,
reference labs, and pharmacies.
Eastridge, who already has a homegrown EHR, thinks Care-Spark is a good idea. "The main value would be having more information
available when I'm seeing a patient," he says. "The second thing would be improved communication between doctors and hospitals."
What is a RHIO and why should you care?
CareSpark and HealthBridge are very different examples of what is being called a "regional health information organization,"
or RHIO. Some observers define a RHIO as any electronic system for exchanging clinical data that involves at least two separately
owned organizations. Under that definition, the Community Connection model of Shared Health isn't a RHIO. However, the claims,
pharmacy, and lab data that feed Community Connection do provide doctors with a basic kind of electronic record that's similar
to what true RHIOs offer. And this year, Shared Health plans to broaden the scope of Community Connection from Medicaid to
patients who are privately insured.