Published: September 02, 2010
Greater Cincinnati Awarded $13.8 Million Federal Grant to Showcase Innovative Methods for Improving Patient Care
CINCINNATI - (BUSINESS WIRE) - U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Secretary Kathleen Sebelius
announced today that the Greater Cincinnati community was awarded a
$13.8 million Beacon Community cooperative agreement. A part of the
Recovery Act, the Beacon Community Program is aimed at achieving
measurable improvements in health care quality, safety and efficiency in
selected communities.
"The Beacon program uses health information technology tools to link
health providers and other community-wide resources in new and
innovative ways," Secretary Sebelius said. "Under the Beacon program,
communities first identify leading health problems that are unique to
their community, develop innovative, health IT-related strategies, and
work together through community collaborations to implement their
strategies and track their performance."
The Greater Cincinnati Beacon Collaboration is a 30 month initiative
that will use technology and collaboration among a wide range of
stakeholders and organizations to catalyze meaningful improvements in
the quality and efficiency of health care delivery. HealthBridge and a
consortium of partners including the Cincinnati Children's Hospital
Medical Center, GE, the Greater Cincinnati Health Council, the Health
Improvement Collaborative, and the University of Cincinnati (UC) are the
lead organizations for the Greater Cincinnati Beacon Collaboration.
"We are delighted to be a part of a select group of communities
demonstrating to the nation how technology improvements and community
collaboration can bring about real change in our health care system,"
said Robert Steffel, Chief Executive Officer for HealthBridge. "The
announcement today is recognition of the tremendous commitment to
collaboration and innovation by health care providers and community
leaders in Greater Cincinnati."
Under two large demonstration projects, participants will work to
improve care processes for children with asthma and adults with
diabetes. These two projects build on and expand efforts that have been
underway in the Greater Cincinnati region. The demonstration projects
will help physician practices to provide optimal care for patients with
asthma and diabetes, reduce preventable visits to emergency rooms and
re-hospitalizations, and improve information flow and care coordination
as patients move from one care setting to another.
Underlying these projects will be one of the nation's most advanced and
secure networks for sharing electronic health information. HealthBridge
will provide the technology infrastructure and connectivity: for
hospitals to alert care teams when a patient has been released from the
hospital and needs follow-up care, for a primary care doctor to send a
summary of a patient's medical information electronically to a
specialist, for patients to have improved access to their own health
information, and for researchers to determine which interventions have
the most impact on improving quality, cost and outcomes.
"Few communities can gather all of the unique community, technology and
quality improvement assets that the Greater Cincinnati community can,"
said Robert Graham, M.D., project director for Cincinnati's Aligning
Forces for Quality initiative and professor of family medicine at the UC
College of Medicine. "This is an ambitious collaboration, but the
combined expertise of the community partners, the commitment of
employers and health plans, and the dedication of our provider community
are second to none."
"Cincinnati Children's has been recognized nationally for its efforts to
improve the quality and safety of care for children and families," said
Dee Ellingwood, senior vice president, planning and business development
at Cincinnati Children's Hospital Medical Center. "We are pleased to be
a part of this collaboration and look forward to working with others in
Greater Cincinnati to demonstrably improve outcomes for children in our
community."
GE has committed to providing $1 million of in-kind resources, including
equipment, software and funding to assist with performance measurement,
public reporting and payment reform to support the Greater Cincinnati
Beacon Collaboration, as well as an executive leader to assist in the
effort.
"GE is committed to working together with providers and community
leaders to improve the health care system in Greater Cincinnati," said
Bill Fitzgerald, vice president and general manager of Assembly, Test
and Overhaul at GE Aviation. "A high quality, affordable, accessible
health system will benefit our employees and the entire community."
The Greater Cincinnati Beacon Collaboration will also coordinate closely
with other federal and community programs such as the Tri-State Regional
Extension Center, HealthBridge's Nationwide Health Information Network
projects and the Aligning Forces for Quality (AF4Q) initiative.
HealthBridge received a $9.7 million Regional Extension Center award in
February 2010. The Health Improvement Collaborative is a Robert Wood
Johnson Foundation AF4Q grantee.
Today's federal award is part of the $2 billion effort to achieve
widespread meaningful use of health IT in the United States and access
to an electronic health record (EHR) for each person in the United
States by 2014.
About HealthBridge
Since its founding in 1997 as a non-profit community-based organization,
HealthBridge has grown to become one of the largest, most advanced and
financially successful health information exchange organizations in the
United States. Each month roughly 3 million clinical lab tests,
radiology reports, discharge summaries and other health information are
transmitted electronically to more than 5,500 authorized physicians
through HealthBridge's secure technology network, more than nearly any
other collaborative health information organization in the country.
Dedicated to helping providers and communities achieve meaningful use of
health information technology, HealthBridge also operates the Tri-State
Regional Extension Center and the Collaborating Communities Network of
health information exchange organizations. HealthBridge has been
recognized in many publications for its innovative practices including
the Wall Street Journal, eHealth Initiative, and HIMSS, just to name a
few. For more information about HealthBridge or the Tri-State REC, see www.healthbridge.org.

HealthBridge
Trudi Matthews, 513-247-5266
Director of Policy
and Public Relations
tmatthews@healthbridge.org
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