American Academy of Family Physicians

Printer-friendly version

Share this on AAFP Connection

Share this page

President Bush's Order Boosts EHRs, Price Transparency

By Leslie Champlin

An Aug. 22 executive order signed by President Bush will have little immediate impact on family physicians, unless they plan to buy or upgrade their electronic health records, or EHRs. Family physicians who are changing their EHR systems, however, should ask whether their vendors have already certified or are planning to certify their systems with the Certification Commission for Healthcare Information Technology, or CCHIT, according to Rosemarie Sweeney, AAFP vice president for practice management and policy analysis.

CCHIT Certified
Official certification of an EHR is one of several criteria that family physicians should consider in purchasing and implementing health information technology in their practices, she said.

"If family physicians have an electronic health record that's not CCHIT-certified and they're going to upgrade, they need to ask their vendors whether the EHR system is currently certified or whether they're planning to get it certified," she said. "Many of these systems are so new that the vendors haven't had the opportunity to go through the certification process yet."

The executive order affects the Federal Employees Health Benefits Program, or FEHBP; Medicare; the Indian Health Service; the TRICARE program for the Department of Defense; and the health care program operated by the Department of Veterans Affairs. It calls on the agencies to

  • use, where available, certified, interoperable health information technology;
  • develop quality-of-care programs and cooperate with the private sector in developing quality measures;
  • publicize the prices that the agencies pay for common procedures; and
  • develop and identify practices that promote high-quality health care.
"In order to do business with the federal government, you've got to show us your prices, and you've got to help us develop a qualitative standard so the people that we're trying to help know what they're getting," said President Bush in remarks he made as he signed the order. "It's an order that basically commits the federal government to work with state and local (governments) and docs and hospitals to lead the way and be a part of this new movement about transparency in pricing and quality."

Transparency Concerns

Physicians have expressed concern that government-mandated price transparency could mislead patients. AAFP President Larry Fields, M.D., of Ashland, Ky., expressed those concerns to Allan Hubbard, the president's assistant for economic policy, during a February White House meeting.

The concept "is a good idea, but must be done very cautiously," he said at the time. "A simple click of the mouse on the computer or a price list on the wall would be less than informative. It could lead to problems with expectations not being met on price."

The Academy has emphasized that health care differs from other commodities because the final price of an office visit often depends on the results of the history and physical examination. Although some prices, such as the charge for a basic office visit or an immunization, can be posted, a physician can't always predict the final cost of an acute care visit because additional lab work may be required to ensure an accurate diagnosis.

However, President' Bush's executive order doesn't mandate a price list above the office receptionist, according to Doreen Bell, AAFP government relations representative.

"What the order actually says is that each agency shall make available to beneficiaries the prices that its health plans pay to providers," she said. "There's nothing there that says it's necessary to provide that information prior to providing the services. Some people are wondering whether the current explanation-of-benefits letters sent to patients by insurers doesn't already cover that base. There's not much information on how to go about implementing it."

Quality Measures

Analysts predicted no immediate impact on physicians caring for patients with Medicare, TRICARE, veteran's health services or FEHB. The order takes effect Jan. 1, 2007, but it addresses general goals that must be met over time, they say.

Although the executive order has little immediate pragmatic impact, its general sense supports AAFP efforts to encourage adoption of EHRs and to develop performance measures that improve patient care and lay the groundwork for future Medicare payment systems, according to Sweeney.

"This pushes the system in the direction that the Academy has been pushing," she said. "It promotes the idea of organized development and consistent use of performance measures, which we've been working toward through the Ambulatory Care Quality Alliance, the National Quality Forum and the Physicians' Consortium."

The Academy -- the first medical society to join the National Quality Forum and a founding member of the Ambulatory Care Quality Alliance -- has been recognized by government and industry officials for its leadership in development of quality measures.

Share this on AAFP Connection

Government & Medicine

PCMH Is Answer to Medicare Payment Problems

Physician Groups Unite to Call for SGR Repeal

Threatened Medicare Payment Cuts Cause Chaos for FPs

AAFP, Medical Organizations Push for SGR Repeal

Focus of Conference Call is Shared Savings, Advance Payment

AAFP Renews Push for SGR Fix

FPs Can Expect Slight Changes in Medicare Pay for 2012

HHS Approach to Essential Health Benefits Falls Flat

CMS Delays Implementation of 'Sunshine Act'

Congress Works Out Temporary Solution to SGR Cut

Community-based Residencies Would Benefit From House Bill

GME Funding to Remain Level in 2012

House Rejects Measure to Block Medicare Pay Cut

House Addresses Medicare Payment Cut

AAFP Backs Tavenner as New CMS Administrator

Supercommittee Fails to Address SGR

Overcoming Scarce Resources to Enact Health Care Reform

Medicare Payment: Value Is as Important as Volume

AAFP President-elect Makes Return Visit to Capitol Hill

Insurance Exchanges, CO-OPs Might Provide Opportunity for FPs

AAFP Members Speak Out on Title VII Funding

Campaign Addresses Need for Medicare Payment Reform

AAFP Continues to Press Congress for Payment Solution

AAFP Leaders Take On Washington

Campaign Focuses on GME Outreach

'Family Medicine Matters,' AAFP Members Tell Congress

AAFP Outlines Suggested Changes for CO-OP Program

Groups Call on Supercommittee to Address Medical Liability Reform

Grassroots Efforts to Repeal SGR Continue

Bill Linking Mandatory Education to Prescribing Not Needed

Blended Payment Model Gives Boost to Primary Care Services

AAFP Joins AMA, Other Groups in Calling for SGR Repeal

Eliminating SGR May Come With High Price

Tobacco Oversight Must Include Cigars, Say AAFP, Other Groups

AAFP Rallies Congress of Delegates on Medicare Payment

AMA Task Force Focuses on Fixing the SGR

2012 Physician Fee Schedule Needs Work, Says AAFP

New Task Force Takes Steps to Better Value Primary Care

Deficit-reduction Plan Must Eliminate SGR, Says AAFP

Physicians File Lawsuit Over RUC, CMS Relationship

Policy Brief Explains HHS Insurance Exchange Plans

Deficit-reduction Plan Falls Short, Says AAFP President

YouTube Video Designed to Encourage SGR Repeal