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1 posted on 04/09/2009 4:02:11 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: All
SNIPPET:

"The joint virtual lifetime record will take the next leap to delivering seamless, high-quality care while serving as a national model, officials said."

2 posted on 04/09/2009 4:03:02 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: Cindy
this is actually a good idea

I cannot believe how bad some of the government databases are

I guess I am just being optimistic that they will do THIS database correctly

6 posted on 04/09/2009 4:26:34 PM PDT by Mr. K (physically unable to proofreed (<---oops))
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To: Cindy
This is exactly the same kind of national database of private health records that Hillary Clinton wanted in her failed health care reform attempt. At the time, conservatives went into a wild-eyed fury over the idea of such government intrusion into their personal medical information.

Now that Obama has announced the very same program for veterans as a trial balloon, it is getting little if any push back from anyone.

Obama is using the veterans as a critique-proof test group to trial the program. If it's "for the veterans" it must be a good thing. Anybody who opposes the program must be against veteran's health care. "The veterans" are now being substituted for "the children".

This has got to be stopped, but will any conservatives have the guts to call Obama on his slight-of-hand tactic? Can they without inciting the wraith of both liberals and conservatives?

Obama has probably found a new tactic that will be used grease the path for even more of his socialist agenda. It will all be done "for the veterans" first -- then it will be done to the rest of us.

8 posted on 04/09/2009 5:52:31 PM PDT by been_lurking
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Note: The following text is a quote:

http://www.defenselink.mil//news/newsarticle.aspx?id=55490

News
American Forces Press Service
DoD, VA Work to Create Lifetime Electronic Records

By Navy Lt. Jennifer Cragg
Special to American Forces Press Service

WASHINGTON, Aug. 14, 2009 – For servicemembers who still remember hand-carrying their medical records back and forth to appointments, the new virtual lifetime electronic record will help prevent misplaced paperwork and help providers maintain and offer quality health care, the acting director of the program said.

President Barack Obama, along with Defense Secretary Robert M. Gates and Veterans Affairs Secretary Eric Shinseki, announced April 9 that VA and the Defense Department have taken steps toward creating a joint virtual lifetime electronic record, or VLER.

“The president’s vision, as he expressed that day, will permit information vital to health care, benefits and services to be available seamlessly to both departments from the moment a servicemember enters the military until the servicemember’s or veteran’s death,” Navy Rear Adm. Gregory A. Timberlake, acting director of the Defense Department-VA Interagency Program Office, said yesterday in a “DotMilDocs” interview on Pentagon Web Radio.

The steps to create the electronic record exchange began a little more than a year ago when the program office was established as the single point of accountability for the records in response to Section 1635 of the National Defense Authorization Act for fiscal 2008.

“VLER will serve as a model for a nation, especially at this tumultuous time of health care reform, and is intended to be a lifetime, personal record for use by the servicemembers, their families and service providers to ensure a seamless continuum of care and benefits,” Timberlake said.

“The president challenged the departments to work together to define and build a seamless system of integration with one simple goal: when a servicemember separates from the military, he or she will no longer have to walk paper records from a [Defense Department] duty station to a local VA health center,” the admiral said. “Their electronic records will transition along with them and remain with them forever.”

While the electronic record will help to reduce the loss of hard-copy health records, it also is intended to provide a framework to ensure that health care providers have all the information they need to deliver high-quality health care, while reducing medical errors. The electronic record is a critical piece of the health care puzzle because, while the Defense Department and VA can share information electronically, it may not be easily accessible by private clinicians, Timberlake said.

“A significant amount of health care provided to [the Defense Department] and VA beneficiaries occurs by private-sector providers,” he said. “So, we need the ability to make health records available to the providers who need it, regardless if they are a military, VA, or doctor within the public community.”

Numerous, ongoing data-sharing activities are continuing among agencies that share information and are committed to improving health care to “servicemen and women of the present, past and future,” Timberlake said.

“Every day, millions of pieces of health information are shared between [the Defense Department] and VA; however, as Congress mandated and as the departments have acknowledged, there is more work to do to make it flow smoother,” he said.

(Navy Lt. Jennifer Cragg is assigned to Defense Media Activity’s Emerging Media Directorate.)

Related Sites:
“Dot Mil Docs” on Pentagon Web Radio
Related Articles:
Obama: VA Outreach Aims at Seamless Transition


13 posted on 08/14/2009 3:40:02 PM PDT by Cindy
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To: All

NOTE The following text is a quote:

http://www.defense.gov//News/NewsArticle.aspx?ID=59610

Departments Cooperate on Electronic Health Records

By Army Sgt. 1st Class Michael J. Carden
American Forces Press Service

ARLINGTON, Va., June 14, 2010 – The nation may never become entirely “paperless” in the way it documents patient medical records, but the military and veterans health care communities are on the right path and have the technologies in place to one day be very close, officials said last week.

“There was a time that we didn’t have anything really electronic,” Army Maj. Frank Tucker, a physician’s assistant and chief systems architect for the Military Health Systems’ Joint Medical Information System, said at a June 11 electronic health records open house held here. “But we’ve evolved from there with 100 percent deployment of our outpatient electronic records … [and] are now on a path toward completing [inpatient electronic records] deployment.”

Tucker was part of a panel at the event that discussed advances and plans the Defense and Veterans Affairs departments have in electronic health records. The open house featured some of the latest tools the military uses to digitally input and track troops’ medical information.

First responders on the ground in Afghanistan now have the capability to process troop health information from the heat of battle to a theater-level hospital in real time. Data can be exchanged and updated all the way up the chain to regional facilities, such as Landstuhl Regional Medical Center in Germany, and to Walter Reed Army Medical Center in Washington, D.C., before troops arrive for treatment.

The military first deployed what it considered basic electronic health care records in 1996 under the Composite Health Care System, or CHCS. Everything from laboratory blood work, prescription medications, X-rays and appointment scheduling were available for outpatient documentation.
Through technologies such as the Armed Forces Health Longitudinal Technology system, also known as AHTLA, and CHCS before that, the military relied on paper files to document patient records. Troops injured in battle were transported with their hard-copy medical records, which sometimes were outdated. That method often left health care providers with many unanswered questions as troops transitioned through different levels of care, Tucker explained.

Troops severely injured in Iraq, for example, transition to several facilities during their treatment and recovery. Injured troops likely are seen at their unit aid station, then at a field hospital and moved to a larger facility, such as in Landstuhl. Servicemembers then could move to Walter Reed, and then would transition to the VA health care system if they separate from the military.

It can be difficult, Tucker said, to keep a perfect record of every laboratory result — including prescriptions and treatments servicemembers receive when they’re injured — by the time they’re seen at a VA hospital. Such shortfalls could delay the care and benefits process, he explained.

But today, the VA health system receives only electronic records for servicemembers from the Defense Department, Dr. Ross Fletcher, chief of staff for the VA Medical Center in Washington, D.C., said.

Because of the technologies and integrated electronic records system the Defense Department and VA share, Fletcher said, the VA will never again file paper records. He explained that some electronic documents he sees may be scanned from paper files, but they’re electronic by the time they’re passed to VA.

The shared system is much easier and quicker for his staff to help provide the best possible service for veterans, he said. And because of this capability, he added, the two organizations are “very close” to becoming completely paperless.

“I think we’re very close,” he said. “If I see a record on a wounded warrior in the imaging system, I see everything that the [previous military] doctor saw. As long as I’m seeing everything that doctor saw, that’s a very complete record for me.

“As it moves on and becomes electronic to begin with,” he continued, “it’s faster, much easier to make care happen. I can look things up a lot easier. Electronic health records we use are great now, but it will probably be much better in 10 years as we evolve.”

But a number of factors prevent the departments from becoming completely paperless, several panelists explained.

On the federal government side, Tucker cited growing fields of study, such as traumatic brain injury, and evolving missions troops take on, such as humanitarian assistance, that are difficult for federal health care providers to anticipate. It’s a matter of updating software and deploying systems for medical personnel, he said.

This mostly occurs when documenting inpatient care, he said, adding that military providers also are required to document detainee patient records.
“We still have some gaps; we are still finding those gaps as medicine evolves,” Tucker said. “As those gaps turn into requirements, we will provide capabilities to document, electronically, those shortfalls.”

In the civilian sector, only 11 percent of medical facilities use electronic records, and of those, their system standards vary from those the military and VA use. So the roughly 50 percent of military members, veterans and their families who seek care outside the military and VA systems are unlikely to benefit from the technology, Army Col. Claude Hines Jr. said.

“The problem within the health care sector today is the standards within the nation,” said Hines, the deputy program executive officer of innovations and delivery for the Joint Medical Information Systems. “[The Defense Department] and VA are sharing data based upon standards we created together. The nation wants to move to a national standard. Regardless of what the system is, as long as we follow the national standard, we should be able to share that data.

“Also, when the doctor looks at that data, he has the assurance that it is correct, and the integrity of that data is maintained,” Hines added.

Hines also pointed out that unless those seeking care in the private sector physically bring their records to the military or VA, it’s likely that data goes unnoticed and documented. However, initiatives are under way within the Defense Department to scan such records into their systems, he said.
Ultimately, the long-term intent is for all health records to be shared, Tucker said, adding that troops shouldn’t be hindered with trying to provide proof of their conditions or injuries. The goal is that their health information be provided seamlessly without delay, he said.

“Certainly, there are a number of improvements in information we’d like to see that are shared between both departments [and the civilian sector] that doesn’t impede care and that doesn’t impede our ability to determine benefits,” Tucker said. “We do believe, as we move forward and get these other pieces electronically shared with standards, it will provide greater value to the overall community.”

Related Sites:
Military Health System
Defense Health Information Management System
Department of Veterans Affairs


14 posted on 06/14/2010 5:19:34 PM PDT by Cindy
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