Major Step Toward Secure and Portable Health Information for American
Consumers
HHS Secretary Mike Leavitt announced today the award of contracts totaling
$18.6 million to four groups of health care and health information
technology organizations to develop prototypes for a Nationwide Health
Information Network (NHIN) architecture. The contracts awarded to these
four consortia will move the nation toward the President's goal of personal
electronic health records by creating a uniform architecture for health care
information that can follow consumers throughout their lives.
"The Nationwide Health Information Network contracts will bring together
technology developers with doctors and hospitals to create innovative
state-of-the-art ideas for how health information can be securely shared,"
Secretary Leavitt said. "This effort will help design an information
network that will transform our health care system resulting in higher
quality, lower costs, less hassle and better care for American consumers."
These contracts complete the foundation for an interoperable,
standards-based network for the secure exchange of health care information.
HHS previously has awarded contracts to create processes to harmonize health
information standards, develop criteria to certify and evaluate health IT
products, and develop solutions to address variations in business policies
and state laws that affect privacy and security practices that may pose
challenges to the secure communication of health information.
The four consortia are led respectively by Accenture, Computer Sciences
Corporation (CSC), International Business Machines (IBM) and Northrop
Grumman. Each consortium is a partnership between technology developers and
health care providers in three local health care markets. Each group will
develop an architecture and a prototype network for secure information
sharing among hospitals, laboratories, pharmacies and physicians in the
three participating markets. Additionally, all four consortia will work
together to ensure that information can move seamlessly between each of the
four networks to be developed, thus establishing a single infrastructure
among all the consortia for the sharing of electronic health information.
"These prototypes are the key to information portability for American
consumers and are a major step in our national effort to modernize health
care delivery," said David J. Brailer, M.D., Ph.D., National Coordinator for
Health Information Technology. "This is a critical piece of moving health IT
from hope to reality."
Each of the four consortia will design and implement a standards-based
network prototype during the coming year. The prototypes will test patient
identification and information locator services; user authentication, access
control and other security protections and specialized network functions, as
well as test the feasibility of large-scale deployment. The work of the
consortia will inform the deliberations of the American Health Information
Community (the Community), a new federal advisory committee chaired by
Secretary Leavitt, which is charged with providing input to HHS and the
industry on how to make health records digital and interoperable.
The consortia will share ideas and information about the architecture and
prototypes with each other and with the public in order to accelerate secure
and seamless exchange of health information across the nation. Once
created, the architecture design for each of the networks will be placed in
the public domain to stimulate others to develop further innovative
approaches to implementing health information technology.
The NHIN consortia will work closely with other HHS partners, including the
Health Information Technology Standards Panel established by the American
National Standards Institute, the Certification Commission for Health
Information Technology, and the Health Information Security and Privacy
Collaboration established by RTI and the National Governor's Association.
The four Nationwide Health Information Network consortia consist of the
following organizations:
- Accenture, working with Apelon, Cisco, CGI-AMS, Creative Computing
Solutions, eTech Security Pro, Intellithought, Lucent Glow, Oakland
Consulting Group, Oracle, and Quovadx. This group will work with the
following health market areas: Eastern Kentucky Regional Health Community
(Kentucky); CareSpark (Tennessee); and West Virginia eHealth Initiative
(West Virginia).
- CSC, working with Browsersoft, Business Networks International,
Center for Information Technology Leadership, Connecting for Health, DB
Consulting Group, eHealth Initiative, Electronic Health Record Vendors
Association, Microsoft, Regenstrief Institute, SiloSmashers, and Sun
Microsystems. This group will work with the following health market areas:
Indiana Health Information Exchange (Indiana); MA-SHARE (Massachusetts); and
Mendocino HRE (California).
- IBM, working with Argosy, Business Innovation, Cisco, HMS
Technologies, IDL Solutions, Ingenium, and VICCS. This group will work with
the following health market areas: Taconic Health Information Network and
Community (New York); North Carolina Healthcare Information and
Communications Alliance (Research Triangle, North Carolina); and North
Carolina Healthcare Information and Communications Alliance (Rockingham
County, North Carolina).
- Northrop Grumman, working with Air Commander, Axolotl, Client/Server
Software Solutions, First Consulting Group, SphereCom Enterprises, and
WebMD. This group will work with the following health market areas: Santa
Cruz RHIO (Santa Cruz, California); HealthBridge (Cincinnati, Ohio); and
University Hospitals Health System (Cleveland, Ohio).
The four contracts result from an HHS Request for Proposals (RFP) that was
announced by Secretary Leavitt and Dr. Brailer on June 6, 2005. HHS
released the RFPs after receiving public comment on how best to achieve
nationwide interoperability of health information through a Request for
Information (RFI) published on Nov. 15, 2004.
More details on these contracts are available at
http://www.hhs.gov/healthit.