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August 23rd, 2009

Open source can save your life

Posted by Robin Harris @ 11:40 pm

Categories: Uncategorized

Tags: Hospital, Open Source, Health Care, VA, Healthcare, Vertical Industries, Benefits, Human Resources, Robin Harris

Quick, if your life depended on it, which health care information system would you rather your hospital used:

  • A proprietary system developed by software engineers based on marketing input, bug reports and customer requests?
  • An open source system developed by thousands of health care practitioners including doctors, nurses, pharmacists, techs and developers, tested and refined in hundred of hospitals?

Well?

A Vista that works.
Known as VistA (Veterans health Information Systems and Technology Architecture), it consists of over 20,000 programs that share an Electronic Health Record (EHR). While it was initially developed at the Veterans Administration Hospitals - America’s single largest health care system - the open source product is freely available.

What does the VA know?
The government can’t do anything right - except for the finest military in the world, the National Labs, the very popular Medicare program, DARPA, aviation safety, GPS, the original Internet and hundreds of other excellent agencies and programs - so how good can VA care be? Is “best” good enough?

According to a Fox News BusinessWeek magazine article:

The 154 hospitals and 875 clinics run by the Veterans Affairs Dept. have been ranked best-in-class by a number of independent groups on a broad range of measures, from chronic care to heart disease treatment to percentage of members who receive flu shots. It offers all the same services, and sometimes more, than private sector providers.

According to a Rand Corp. study, the VA system provides two-thirds of the care recommended by such standards bodies as the Agency for Healthcare Research & Quality. Far from perfect, granted — but the nation’s private-sector hospitals provide only 50%.

And while studies show that 3% to 8% of the nation’s prescriptions are filled erroneously, the VA’s prescription accuracy rate is greater than 99.997%, a level most hospitals only dream about. That’s largely because the VA has by far the most advanced computerized medical-records system in the U.S.

And for the past six years the VA has outranked private-sector hospitals on patient satisfaction in an annual consumer survey conducted by the National Quality Research Center at the University of Michigan. This keeps happening despite the fact that the VA spends an average of $5,000 per patient, vs. the national average of $6,300.

[bolding added]

One more kicker: vets are older and sicker than the general population, making this performance even more impressive. It wasn’t always so - my late father, a WWII vet and a doctor, wasn’t impressed in the ’80s - but during the Clinton administration the VA launched a successful effort to improve care using technology and common sense.

Spend less? Get more? No wonder health reform is controversial!

Errors can be hazardous to your health
Almost 200,000 people a year die of preventable hospital mistakes according to a recent report. That’s 4x the deaths of traffic accidents - too bad hospitals don’t have seat belts.

We don’t know the exact number because the American Medical Association and American Hospital Association spent $81 million lobbying against a national medical error reporting system. They said the system would drive medical errors underground: doctors “burying” their mistakes?

Shocking. I so-o-o trust the medical establishment.

The bigger picture
With the complexity of diagnosis and treatment, the many drug interactions, and the scarcity of good information on what works and what doesn’t, it is obvious that information technology can - and in the VA and some other countries has - lowered costs and improved care as the President says.

But in today’s system, the insurance companies make more money when they don’t pay for care. And it is the sickest among us who suffer the payment denials, since they need the most care.

Today insurance companies make their money cherry-picking the healthiest and denying the sickest. So centralized electronic health records are a weapon that can be turned against us at any time as proof of a “pre-existing condition” to deny reimbursement.

Requiring that insurance companies offer insurance to everyone who applies and eliminating the “pre-existing condition” excuse are crucial reforms. After all, “life” is a pre-existing condition that inevitably leads to death.

Given the results the VA has shown, a “public option” is a great way to push the insurance companies and for-profit hospital chains to improve care, reduce errors AND drive down costs.

The Storage Bits take
In a field as complex and fast-changing as health care a proprietary system would be hard-pressed to keep up with the needs of thousands of hospitals. Open source won’t be perfect either, but putting the resources close to the people using them just makes more sense.

We are rapidly approaching a day when there is enough storage capacity for each of us to store detailed health-related records. Not just doctor’s visits, but exercise details, diet, drinking and more.

When all Americans have access to non-emergency health care and aren’t penalized for pre-existing conditions that information will help all who care to live stronger, longer and healthier lives. At lower cost to society.

Comments welcome, of course. I wrote more about my father’s WWII experiences here. And I look forward to the day when American doctors and nurses can go back to doing what they signed up for: taking care of people in need.

Robin HarrisRobin Harris has been messing with computers for over 30 years and selling and marketing data storage for over 20 in companies large and small. See his full profile and disclosure of his industry affiliations.


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  • Talkback
  • Most Recent of 72 Talkback(s)
Your guiding light must be under a bushel basket
You obviously haven't researched the lessons learned from the VA Healthcare Transformation. It certainly is true that there are other factors that made the VA system unequivocally the best in the nati... (Read the rest)
Posted by: flydoc40 Posted on: 08/29/09 You are currently: a Guest | | Terms of Use
VA health care  thinking about consequences | 08/24/09
Please give the VA credit  Robin HarrisZDNet Moderator | 08/24/09
You're seriously confused about VistA  Vesicant | 08/24/09
It's in the public domain but it isn't open source  IT_User | 08/24/09
I should do your research?  Vesicant | 08/25/09
No, better you explain  IT_User | 08/25/09
FOIA and Open Source  BaronMind | 08/25/09
VistA is still here for a reason  BaronMind | 08/25/09
don't mix OSS with socialized medicine  Linux Geek | 08/24/09
Thank you  pdf6161 | 08/24/09
Who's crazy?  Robin HarrisZDNet Moderator | 08/24/09
How about some respect for "fellow Americans"?  Ole Man | 08/24/09
define 'better'  ericesque | 08/24/09
That's a very short-sighted view.  masonwheeler | 08/24/09
that's a very socialist view  ericesque | 08/24/09
If that actually worked, we wouldn't be in this mess.  masonwheeler | 08/24/09
You paying for someone elses claim  Jack-Booted EULA | 08/25/09
You're paying twice!  flydoc40 | 08/29/09
EXCELLENT points!  HypnoToad72 | 08/24/09
A small minority?  masonwheeler | 08/24/09
Majorities have a tendancy to shrink (rapidly)  Ole Man | 08/24/09
Crazy liberals?  IT_User | 08/24/09
Altrernatively...  Dr.C | 08/24/09
So software should be free...  jackbond | 08/24/09
As a non-US resident  AndyCee | 08/24/09
Never define by temporal date. Define by avenues and attitudes.  HypnoToad72 | 08/24/09
Inconcruities  Patanjali | 08/25/09
Yeah  AndyCee | 08/25/09
FOSS has a place in capitalism  flydoc40 | 08/29/09
Wake up...  storm14k | 08/25/09
Until you lose your job  Spats30 | 08/24/09
Walter Reed. The Crown Jewel....  Freddy McGriff | 08/24/09
Walter Reed is not VA  bill.coats64@... | 08/24/09
It's also not an example  IT_User | 08/24/09
Thank you...  storm14k | 08/25/09
agree 100%  ITLeader | 08/26/09
I cannot speak for those fresh out of combat  Ole Man | 08/24/09
Walter Reed a horrifying exception  IT_User | 08/24/09
Exception proves the rule  Ole Man | 08/24/09
That's not actually how the saying works  ITLeader | 08/25/09
Exactly!  Ole Man | 08/25/09
Yes  ITLeader | 08/25/09
DoD vs VA  flydoc40 | 08/29/09
You know what the difference is...  masonwheeler | 08/24/09
 masonwheeler | 08/24/09
Stick to hard drives, Harris.  ericesque | 08/24/09
The data is real.  Robin HarrisZDNet Moderator | 08/24/09
So, your argument is that it is 100 percent  GuidingLight | 08/25/09
Your guiding light must be under a bushel basket  flydoc40 | 08/29/09
RE: Open source can save your life  Vesicant | 08/24/09
Being scared and being sick are two different animals  Ole Man | 08/24/09
Pushing your private agenda....  Vesicant | 08/25/09
That's easy  masonwheeler | 08/25/09
I want something that works.  kraterz | 08/24/09
Rather miopic view  Robert Crocker | 08/24/09
Re: rather myopic view  masonwheeler | 08/24/09
That was three problems...  Robert Crocker | 08/25/09
Re: a rather myopic view  leudoc2 | 08/25/09
Two separate, yet interesting things  Robert Crocker | 08/25/09
Public option a disaster?  ITLeader | 08/25/09
All I can say is...  jdickey | 08/25/09
Dana Blankenhorn's article contradicts your rosey view  ejhonda | 08/25/09
General Howard is not the VA  BaronMind | 08/25/09
I love the 1 comment below the referenced article - too funny.(NT)  aktazdevil | 08/25/09
No, it doesn't  Robin HarrisZDNet Moderator | 08/26/09
Why must you put politics into your articles?  pauldracos | 08/25/09
Boy, I wish it were different..  BaronMind | 08/25/09
You win first prize!  Ole Man | 08/25/09
Veterans Told They Have Fatal Disease and Lou Gehrig's Disease  aktazdevil | 08/25/09
And anyways its not really "open source"  aktazdevil | 08/25/09
RE: Open source can save your life  RichardOS | 08/27/09
RE: VistA is the aspirin of EHRs  flydoc40 | 08/29/09

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