Thursday, 4 June 2015

Ohio seeking to stimulate private Big Data market in health care

The next big technology initiative out of Ohio Medicaid won’t come with an RFP.
The Governor’s Office of Health Transformation released for feedback on Wednesday a preliminary health IT strategy for state government. It doesn’t list any software or hardware the state wants to buy, as it did when Ohio Medicaid rebuilt tech for enrollment and claims.

This time, what the state offers is data – and incentives that will lead insurers and health systems to seek out the IT vendors who can make sense of that data.
“Government should not be buying these solutions,” said Greg Moody, health transformation director.
Instead, the idea is to stimulate a market for sharing and analyzing health data to improve health outcomes at lower cost.
“We will pay you more if you achieve the (desired) outcome,” Moody said. “You need to figure out how to do that.”
For the past year, for example, Ohio Medicaid has run a pilot sharing data with hospitals and doctors for six types of common treatment “episodes.” For example, orthopedic surgeons for the first time saw all the costs associated with a knee replacement – not just the doctor’s fee but hospital charges, the price of device and surgical tools, the rehabilitation bill. Some could see their cases had among the lowest costs in the state, while others could wonder why they were among the most expensive.

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