Avicenna Medical Blog

Care Management Weekly News Update 7/25/24

Posted by DeAnn Dennis on Thu, Jul 25, 2024 @ 11:45 AM

As health system IT teams reported steady progress in bringing computer systems and EHR access back online after Friday’s global outage, the U.S Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Security Agency (CISA) warned that cyber threat actors continue to leverage the outage to conduct malicious activity, including phishing attempts. The widespread outage was caused by a faulty software update by CrowdStrike last Friday affected Windows-based computers, although many hospital systems were still experiencing scheduling delays and working through issues on Monday morning. In a blog post, Microsoft estimated the outage affected 8.5 million Windows devices. 

The Department of Veterans Affairs is transitioning online users to Login.gov or ID.me sign-ins to access benefits and health care service accounts, a move that is expected to impact three million veterans and other beneficiaries. In a press release announcing the change, the VA said that after January 2025, veterans and beneficiaries will not be able to use usernames or passwords for My HealtheVet — a digital service that stores information about health records, communications, appointments and prescriptions for veterans’ use. Those who have not transitioned will be able to access data, resume using services online and manage benefits once they have created a new account — a process the VA estimates will take about 10 minutes.

The American Medical Association’s coding panel, which is responsible for creating medical billing codes, is set to meet September 19-21 in Albuquerque where it will consider yet another proposal to lower the requirements for providers to get paid for remote monitoring. Remote monitoring was scarcely mentioned in the Center for Medicare and Medicaid Services’ (CMS) proposed CY2025 physician fee schedule, out last week, which dashed any hope for payment changes by 2025. If the latest remote monitoring code change application goes through at the September coding meeting, the earliest the industry could see significant remote monitoring changes is in 2026, barring legislation.

The Commonwealth Fund has published the results of a study seeking to understand why more primary care practitioners (PCPs) are not participating in value-based payment (VBP) models. After conducting focus groups with PCPs who have not participated in VBP models and interviews with primary care executives and association leaders, the report offers some recommendations about how to improve PCP participation. The report notes that during the past 14 years, CMS and states have tried several VBP models for primary care, but most PCPs still do not participate in VBP models, and the reasons are largely unknown. 

VA’s planned restart of EHR rollouts draws lawmaker concern

The Department of Veterans Affairs is looking to restart deployments of its beleaguered Oracle Cerner electronic health record system at additional medical facilities in fiscal year 2025, but lawmakers said the results of the agency’s most recent rollout does not justify efforts to resume the project. VA announced in April 2023 that it was pausing additional deployments of the EHR system to address a series of technical glitches, patient safety concerns and other issues plaguing the medical facilities where the new software had been deployed. 

 

Tags: Weekly Industry News