National Conference of State Legislatures - The Forum for America's Ideas
Health

 

News Highlights: HealthHot Topics: HealthStanding CommitteeState Health NewslettersA-Z Issues & NCSL Contacts | Search
    View Full Address      

Federal Health Reform

The House floor consideration of  H.R. 3062, the Affordable Health Care for America Act of 2009 is scheduled for November 7, 2009. Final CBO scoring is now available.  Updated November 6, 2009. More

State Bills Opposing Health Reform

A new report shows legislators in at least 11 states are proposing constitutional amendments and laws seeking to limit requirements to purchase coverage while creating a right to buy private health services with less regulation. More

Health Reform: Latest State Examples  

State structures like public employee plans and exchanges are high on some lists as Congress and several states consider a variety of major health reforms. More

Health Resource and Research
NCSL ProgramsAccessCost & QualityDiseases & ConditionsHealth InsuranceHealth ITLong-Term Care & AgingMedicaid, CHIP, Medicare & SSI
Mental Health & Substance AbusePharmaceuticalsProviders & FacilitiesPublic Health & PreventionWomen, Children & FamiliesSpecial Topics
    View Full Address      
Health IT

Overview

Health care has yet to be transformed by the information technology revolution that has swept the U.S. economy. Health information technology (IT) is the use of technology to electronically collect, store, retrieve and transfer clinical, administrative and financial health information. It offers the chance to improve quality and reduce costs in health care.    

States have a vital role to play as the health sector transforms from a paper to an electronic system. States influence health IT, as they do health care more generally, in a number of ways—as purchasers, regulators, providers and planners, and through supporting infrastructure, innovation and workforce development. States vary in the extent to which they tend to pick regulatory or market-oriented approaches to influence their health systems, and these policy preferences carry through in their choices related to health IT policy.

States will need to provide leadership around a wide range of issues as they work on health IT. 

  • Privacy and Security. Many consumers fear that the transformation from a paper to an electronic system will make their medical histories more vulnerable to unauthorized exposure. They fear that if these data fall into the hands of unauthorized parties, they’ll face workplace discrimination and a loss of insurance. Providers want access to patients’ full medical records and are concerned about liability for misuse of data.
  • Health Information Exchange. Making different technology systems able to work together, both within and across providers—interoperability—is vital to realizing the promise of health IT. States will need to ensure that systems used by providers are interoperable and stakeholders (consumers, payers, providers) will have to be engaged to build trust among groups that are not used to working together. For example, health organizations are often reluctant to share their data with competitors, fearing a competitive disadvantage.
  • Health IT adoption issues.  Providers are often expected to purchase health IT systems but may hesitate because cost savings are likely to accrue mainly to insurers, government and employers.  States may have to step in to deal with these misaligned incentives.

To help states facilitate the transformation from paper to the digital age, NCSL established the Health Information Technology Champions (HITCh) project in 2006. HITCh is creating a base for continuing policy analyses in this rapidly evolving area by developing a core of legislative expertise related to health IT policy across states and at NCSL.

HITCh serves as the foundation for all of NCSL’s activities around health IT. The project holds meetings and webinars throughout the year focusing on topics chosen by HITCh members and partners. NCSL project staff for HITCh respond to legislative information requests, track legislation, facilitate exchanges among states, create issue briefs and prepare items for publication in State Health Notes and State Legislatures magazine.

 NCSL Feedback Maximize


  

Fall Forum 2009
 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NCSL Positions

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 
 

 

Denver Office
Tel: 303-364-7700 | Fax: 303-364-7800 | 7700 East First Place | Denver, CO 80230

 

Washington Office
Tel: 202-624-5400 | Fax: 202-737-1069 | 444 North Capitol Street, N.W., Suite 515 | Washington, D.C. 20001

©2009 National Conference of State Legislatures.  All Rights Reserved.