CAS3
07-11-06, 07:29 AM
WASHINGTON (July 10, 2006) - The Department of Veterans Affairs' (VA)
model system of electronic health records, developed with extensive
involvement of front-line health-care providers, has won the prestigious
"Innovations in American Government Award." The annual award, sponsored
by Harvard University's Ash Institute for Democratic Governance and
Innovation at the Kennedy School of Government and administered in
partnership with the Council for Excellence in Government, honors
excellence and creativity in the public sector.
"This great honor is testimony to the vision of health care
professionals throughout VA," said the Honorable R. James Nicholson,
Secretary of Veterans Affairs. "Our electronic health records are
without peer and ensure that our nation's veterans receive the best care
this country can provide."
While health-care costs in the United States continue to soar, VA is
reducing costs and errors while increasing safety and efficiency.
Outside of VA, because patient records are not readily available, one
out of seven Americans ends up hospitalized when outpatient care is all
that's needed. For the same reason, one out of five lab tests is
needlessly repeated outside the VA system. And while the costs of
health care continue to soar for most Americans, the VA is reducing
costs, reducing errors, and becoming the model for what modern health
care management and delivery should look like.
"The involvement of front-line providers, use of performance measures
and universal use of electronic health records have enabled VA to set
the national benchmark in quality of care" said Dr. Jonathan Perlin, VA
Under Secretary for Health. "The electronic records system is called
VistA, and it is an essential part of VA's commitment to giving every
patient safe, effective, efficient, compassionate health care."
VA's complete adoption of electronic health records and performance
measures have resulted in high-quality, low-cost health care with high
patient satisfaction. A recent RAND study found that VA outperforms all
other sectors of American health care across a spectrum of 294 measures
of quality in disease prevention and treatment. For six straight years,
VA has led private-sector health care in the independent American
Customer Satisfaction Index.
Electronic health records also provide numerous other benefits in cost,
quality and access to care. The cost of maintaining the system is $80
per patient per year, less than the cost of one unnecessarily repeated
lab test. In the last 10 years, VistA's efficiencies have offset cost
increases associated with a 100 percent increase in the number of
veterans receiving VA care.
For example, VistA has helped VA save 6,000 lives by improving rates of
pneumonia vaccination among veterans with emphysema, cutting pneumonia
hospitalizations in half and reducing costs by $40 million per year.
Patient waiting times have declined while customer service improved, and
access to care has increased because of on-line availability of health
information.
In addition to saving money, VistA saves lives and ensures continuity of
care even under the most extreme circumstances. Many of the thousands
of residents who fled the Gulf Coast because of Hurricane Katrina left
behind vital health records. Records for the 40,000 veterans in the
area were almost immediately available to clinicians across the country,
even though the VA Medical Center in Gulfport, Mississippi, was
destroyed and the New Orleans VA Medical Center was closed and
evacuated. Veterans were able to resume their treatments, refill their
prescriptions, and get the care they needed because their medical
records were immediately accessible to providers at other VA facilities.
VistA is one of seven government initiatives chosen from 1,000
applications to receive this year's Innovations awards. Because the
programs are models for government's capacity to do good, and do it
well, the $100,000 grant specifically supports sharing of program
information with other organizations.
VA plans to disseminate information and provide demonstrations of VistA
at its medical centers across the country. Additional information is
available by visiting the website www.innovations.va.gov , calling
202-208-2393, sending an email message to innovations@va.gov or
contacting a local VA medical center.
model system of electronic health records, developed with extensive
involvement of front-line health-care providers, has won the prestigious
"Innovations in American Government Award." The annual award, sponsored
by Harvard University's Ash Institute for Democratic Governance and
Innovation at the Kennedy School of Government and administered in
partnership with the Council for Excellence in Government, honors
excellence and creativity in the public sector.
"This great honor is testimony to the vision of health care
professionals throughout VA," said the Honorable R. James Nicholson,
Secretary of Veterans Affairs. "Our electronic health records are
without peer and ensure that our nation's veterans receive the best care
this country can provide."
While health-care costs in the United States continue to soar, VA is
reducing costs and errors while increasing safety and efficiency.
Outside of VA, because patient records are not readily available, one
out of seven Americans ends up hospitalized when outpatient care is all
that's needed. For the same reason, one out of five lab tests is
needlessly repeated outside the VA system. And while the costs of
health care continue to soar for most Americans, the VA is reducing
costs, reducing errors, and becoming the model for what modern health
care management and delivery should look like.
"The involvement of front-line providers, use of performance measures
and universal use of electronic health records have enabled VA to set
the national benchmark in quality of care" said Dr. Jonathan Perlin, VA
Under Secretary for Health. "The electronic records system is called
VistA, and it is an essential part of VA's commitment to giving every
patient safe, effective, efficient, compassionate health care."
VA's complete adoption of electronic health records and performance
measures have resulted in high-quality, low-cost health care with high
patient satisfaction. A recent RAND study found that VA outperforms all
other sectors of American health care across a spectrum of 294 measures
of quality in disease prevention and treatment. For six straight years,
VA has led private-sector health care in the independent American
Customer Satisfaction Index.
Electronic health records also provide numerous other benefits in cost,
quality and access to care. The cost of maintaining the system is $80
per patient per year, less than the cost of one unnecessarily repeated
lab test. In the last 10 years, VistA's efficiencies have offset cost
increases associated with a 100 percent increase in the number of
veterans receiving VA care.
For example, VistA has helped VA save 6,000 lives by improving rates of
pneumonia vaccination among veterans with emphysema, cutting pneumonia
hospitalizations in half and reducing costs by $40 million per year.
Patient waiting times have declined while customer service improved, and
access to care has increased because of on-line availability of health
information.
In addition to saving money, VistA saves lives and ensures continuity of
care even under the most extreme circumstances. Many of the thousands
of residents who fled the Gulf Coast because of Hurricane Katrina left
behind vital health records. Records for the 40,000 veterans in the
area were almost immediately available to clinicians across the country,
even though the VA Medical Center in Gulfport, Mississippi, was
destroyed and the New Orleans VA Medical Center was closed and
evacuated. Veterans were able to resume their treatments, refill their
prescriptions, and get the care they needed because their medical
records were immediately accessible to providers at other VA facilities.
VistA is one of seven government initiatives chosen from 1,000
applications to receive this year's Innovations awards. Because the
programs are models for government's capacity to do good, and do it
well, the $100,000 grant specifically supports sharing of program
information with other organizations.
VA plans to disseminate information and provide demonstrations of VistA
at its medical centers across the country. Additional information is
available by visiting the website www.innovations.va.gov , calling
202-208-2393, sending an email message to innovations@va.gov or
contacting a local VA medical center.