AHLTA ARMED FORCES HEALTH LONGITUDINAL TECHNOLOGY APPLICATION HISTORY

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AHLTA (ARMED FORCES HEALTH LONGITUDINAL TECHNOLOGY APPLICATION)

AHLTA (ARMED FORCES HEALTH LONGITUDINAL TECHNOLOGY APPLICATION)

HISTORY � AHLTA is a $5 billion Do. D-wide hospital information system that was

HISTORY � AHLTA is a $5 billion Do. D-wide hospital information system that was the replacement for the $1. 6 billion Composite Health Care System (CHCS) � CHCS – Basic � Presidential Directive (1997) focused on the need for a centralized, longitudinal patient record for military personnel accessible across the Do. D enterprise � Implemented in January 2004

HISTORY(CONTD) � The system links the U. S. military’s 481 medical treatment facilities (MTFs)

HISTORY(CONTD) � The system links the U. S. military’s 481 medical treatment facilities (MTFs) � Including those deployed abroad ultimately supporting 9. 2 million MHS beneficiaries. � It is the first system to allow for the central storage of standardized EHR data that is available for worldwide sharing of patient information.

ASSETS � LOWEST) � Ordering lab tests � Ordering imaging studies � Ordering referrals

ASSETS � LOWEST) � Ordering lab tests � Ordering imaging studies � Ordering referrals SCORE (1 HIGHEST/30 4 3 5

LOW POINTS (1 -HIGHEST/30 LOWEST) � Patient engagement tools 26 � Documenting care 27

LOW POINTS (1 -HIGHEST/30 LOWEST) � Patient engagement tools 26 � Documenting care 27 � E-messaging and tasking within the office 30 � "Meaningful use“ 28 � Easy and intuitive to use 28

LOW POINTS � CMS certification for EHR incentives (NOT ACHIEVED) � “Military clinicians loath

LOW POINTS � CMS certification for EHR incentives (NOT ACHIEVED) � “Military clinicians loath AHLTA and described it as being hard to learn and use, slow and often down". (S. Ward Casscells, who served as the Defense Department top doc from 2007 -2009)

I had a working VA/Do. D medical record system working in 1985: TOM MENNECKE

I had a working VA/Do. D medical record system working in 1985: TOM MENNECKE

Tom’s View � � The problem of VA/Do. D incompatibility is not a technical

Tom’s View � � The problem of VA/Do. D incompatibility is not a technical problem. It is a political turf war, and has been going on for decades. It deals with a fundamentally intransigent bureaucracy – in the mid levels – that sees VA/Do. D sharing as competition for their jobs and security and Veterans and taxpayers lose. “ (Tom Munnecke)

i. EHR (DOD’s AHLTA merge with VA’s � Vista) Do. D has still chosen

i. EHR (DOD’s AHLTA merge with VA’s � Vista) Do. D has still chosen to pursue various commercial EHR options rather than adopt the VA’s well-liked and thoroughly tested Vist. A system, which is undergoing its own successful expansion to include benefits claims to reduce the substantial backlog.

RECAP � - AHLTA was created 10 years ago before the big start of

RECAP � - AHLTA was created 10 years ago before the big start of EHR � - Too much is not always better (tabs/template � - Portals, Relay health (Patient engagement)/ Va my. Health. Vet � - A decent EHR ahead of its time that does have many parts that will be used in the future