Author: Akash Jha, Sr. Healthcare Consultant, CitiusTech
The 21st Century Cures Act (the Act) is said to be the most important legislation passed since the Affordable Care Act (ACA) and for good reason. While ACA and the HITECH Act saw a tremendous proliferation of EHR technology across the US and significant strides in interoperability, the 21st Century Cures almost perfects the interoperability piece, in that once properly implemented, we could see a seamless patient record irrespective of the clinic, health system, geography or plan.
While the two HHS agencies – ONC and CMS cater to different areas of the market i.e., Health IT vs Payors/Providers, their rulemaking in alignment to 21st Century Cures has broad similarities, in terms of FHIR APIs, USCDI datasets, and information blocking.
The CMS Interoperability & Patient Access rule has broad technological consequences for both payors (CMS-regulated payers, specifically MA organizations, Medicaid Fee-for-Service (FFS) programs, Medicaid managed care plans, CHIP FFS programs, CHIP managed care entities and QHP issuers on the FFEs) and providers, including State agencies administering the Medicaid programs across the US.
Some key technological impact areas for State Medicaid agencies are:
Additionally, Hospitals and other providers (including State-owned) must comply with the exchange of electronic patient event notifications regarding a patient's admission, discharge, and/or transfer (ADT) to another health care facility, update of Provider data on National Plan and Provider Enumeration System (NPPES) and leveraging an ONC 2015 Cures certified EHR in their facilities (ONC’s counterpart rule for Health IT for 21st Century Cures compliance)
As we see, there is a large impact for State health agencies, with strict implementation timelines and a well-defined upgrade path from CMS (updates to USCDI version 2, FHIR standard upgrades, etc.) implying that States should now be looking at a modern, digital, scalable and upgradable solutions, rather than stop-gap measures.