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Use the cloud to harness mainstream patient data for valuable research
January 22, 2013
By: Gary Palgon
Healthcare Solutions for Liaison Technologies
Collaboration is certain to be one of the signature features of the reformed healthcare environment of the future. Increased collaboration is already becoming a reality clinically, operationally and financially as health systems transform themselves to address the challenges of accountable care and value-based purchasing. Much of this cooperation depends on the ability of information technology to link disparate sources of patient information — including individual patients themselves — into a longitudinal medical record accessible to everyone on the care team. However, IT-enabled collaboration will have a direct impact on all aspects of healthcare, including significant but less visible areas like the relationships between pharma companies and providers. It will enable pharma companies to forge much broader and deeper partnerships with hospitals and health systems in ways that not only benefit each other, but also aid individual patients and patient populations as well. Facilitating the secondary use of healthcare data is a case in point. Secondary use involves the ability to access patient data from electronic health records (EHRs) and other sources for purposes such as clinical trials, or the monitoring of safety and efficacy following market release of a drug. Pharma companies obviously need such data in order to develop the most effective drugs for patient treatment, but that data currently resides in disparate bits and pieces across individual hospital and health system databases and in many cases, on paper. Innovation Requires Access Ultimately, for a pharma company to be innovative, it needs access to patients to test drugs within the context of scientific, data-based research. Historically, the challenge always has been how to gain access to those patients. Hospitals — wary of the public perception that pharma organizations somehow detract from the provision of community care — typically have been quiet partners. In a great number of cases, access to patient data has been achieved through “backdoor” business relationships forged between hospital and pharma executives. Perhaps not surprisingly, medical centers that traditionally have been the most strongly engaged in clinical trials also have been vertically focused on areas like cancer treatment or translational research that can be applied practically and quickly to the care of patients. Cancer patients, for example, often constitute a ready-and-willing pool of participants in clinical research because they realize that sharing their information could well result in new treatments or even cures for their life-threatening illnesses. Transparency and Transformation Times are changing rapidly, however, driven partly by technology advances and partly by the need for accountability within an increasingly complex healthcare environment. Data transparency has become required in healthcare, fueled by factors such as the HITECH stimulus, Meaningful Use, and the emergence of new payment models. The push to implement EHRs is integral to establishing an IT infrastructure for patient data. However, EHRs are in essence transaction systems that require highly configured applications, analytics and connectivity with physicians, laboratories, home health agencies, patients and all the other entities that “touch” the patient. For accountable care organizations (ACOs) to support population management, for example, they must have seamless data links that support the longitudinal patient record. Of course, all this must be done within an environment of diminishing resources. No one denies that healthcare is on an unsustainable cost curve. Declining reimbursement, bundled payments and regulatory changes mean health systems will not be reimbursed for unnecessary readmissions or hospital-acquired infections. They will have to become accountable for the care of patient populations. While cost-cutting and streamlining work generated returns in a fee-for-service world, in the world of accountable care, mere cost-cutting will only go so far before it begins to hurt the quality of patient care. This is a new universe, where hospitals have become cost centers. Innovative ways of delivering care outside the hospital and generating revenue streams are of paramount importance. To maintain financial viability, hospitals and health systems have begun to view patient data like currency; it can generate revenue. Better yet, data can also generate more collaboration. Every healthcare stakeholder — including the patient — becomes both a contributor and a beneficiary of data exchange. Pharmaceutical companies are an integral part of this ecosystem because of the treatments they develop and the data they generate from clinical trials and post-market monitoring. With data exchange as the connector, pharma companies can become part of the extended healthcare enterprise more seamlessly. Culture Shift: Data Is To Be Shared It is difficult to overestimate the opportunity for pharma companies presented by IT-enabled collaboration. Just as hospitals increasingly are finding socially beneficial ways to use patient data, drug companies are moving in the same direction. Despite a long history of competition and closely guarded information, pharma organizations are becoming much more open to the idea of data sharing. Some groups over the past few years have come to realize that what differentiates them in the marketplace is not their data, but how they use it. With the movement toward population health management and tracking patients across the continuum of care, health information exchanges (HIEs) and other data aggregation entities have become the logical distribution pipes for data. For pharma firms and health systems to successfully collaborate and enable the secondary use of healthcare data, they must do two things:
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