Remove Accountable Care Remove Groups Remove Interoperability Remove Medicare
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Upcoming Healthcare Regulations and Their Impact on Healthcare IT

Healthcare IT Today

Mo Weitnauer, Chief Product Officer at MRO ACOs Impacted by Change to eCQM One of the biggest regulatory changes ahead directly impacts Accountable Care Organizations (ACOs) and their quality reporting processes. physicians, hospital care, freestanding imaging centers, ambulatory surgical centers, etc.)

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Quality Payment Program Exceeds Year 1 Participation Goal

CMS.gov

Remarkably, the submission rates for Accountable Care Organizations and clinicians in rural practices were at 98 percent and 94 percent, respectively. What makes these numbers most exciting is the concerted efforts by clinicians, professional associations, and many others to ensure high quality care and improved outcomes for patients.

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HIStalk Interviews Jeremy Bikman, CEO, Reaction Data

HIStalk Interviews

Then they brought up the nebulous interoperability, which they couldn’t describe it at all. Most of the research I’ve seen around interoperability is pretty garbage. You can see these guys having to go private again or coming up with their own ownership groups or whatever it is. Now what are they doing?

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Welcome Back Kotter: New York’s next 1115 Waiver

Docnotes

In each region, the NYS Department of Health (DOH) will contract with a HERO entity, which may be an existing entity or a new corporate entity formed by regional participants, including MCOs, primary care and other clinical and community-based providers, QEs, SDHNs and others. there’s quite a bit to this part, which is the problem.

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Building the Future through CMS eHealth

CMS.gov

The truth is that each of these initiatives will have a significant impact on the practice of medicine, but taken together they have the potential to dramatically transform the delivery of health care. Health IT vendors are working hard to build the kind of technology that will realize true electronic interoperability.

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