VA, Oracle Cerner EHR system in the crosshairs
With Megan R. Wilson
CONGRESS AT A BREAKING POINT — The Department of Veterans Affairs and Oracle Cerner’s woes in replacing the agency’s digital health records system has left Congress seething.
The project — tied to at least four veterans’ deaths and estimated to cost more than $50 billion after initial estimates put it at $10 billion — is on pause, and lawmakers are threatening action.
Some are browbeating to end the program, while others want to boost oversight. And last week, the problems led Sen. Chuck Grassley (R-Iowa) to put a hold on a confirmation vote for President Joe Biden’s nomination to fill the VA’s No. 2 position.
One last shot? Key lawmakers, including Senate Veterans’ Affairs Chair Jon Tester (D-Mont.), are trying to give the VA another attempt to get it right after the department halted the system rollout this spring and renegotiated its contract with Oracle Cerner.
“Modernization of the electronic health record is not optional,” Tester told POLITICO.
“It has been a nightmare,” House Veterans’ Affairs Chair Mike Bost (R-Ill.) told POLITICO. Bost is among those threatening to pull the plug, saying the old system could be improved. “I carry the carrot and the stick. … The stick got their attention. That is good because we need to wake them up.”
The backstory: More than a dozen officials who’ve been involved or intimately familiar with the project told POLITICO that the problems stem from myriad issues.
They bemoaned a lack of leaders with relevant experience, a failure to prepare for deployments, a rushed initial rollout and a lack of buy-in from VA clinicians wedded to its homegrown system, VistA, which dates back at least 40 years.
“The program was never designed to be successful,” said Peter Levin, a former VA chief technology officer. “Not making difficult choices and not making good choices is costing, at the very least, taxpayers billions of dollars.”
The response: Oracle Cerner declined to comment on the record but previously told POLITICO it backed the pause.
The VA says it will continue to press forward and use the pause to fix technical problems and optimize the system to meet clinicians’ needs. Neil Evans, the VA’s program director, said that organizational change is more difficult than implementing the new technology.
WELCOME TO MONDAY PULSE. Are you involved in the VA’s EHR modernization, whether as a government official, contractor, clinician or patient who has experienced the system? I want to hear from you and can keep you anonymous if needed. Reach me at [email protected]. And contact me or our regular host, Daniel, at [email protected] with any other tips and feedback.
TODAY ON OUR PULSE CHECK PODCAST, Kelly Hooper talks with Robert King, who moderated POLITICO’s Next Generation of Health Care Therapies event, about what the event’s panelists think the future will hold for rare disease treatments, including how gene therapy might hold the key to effectively treat rare genetic diseases and alleviate future chronic diseases.
ABORTION HOLDING UP APPROPRIATIONS — The perennial battle over abortion policy is no longer limited to Congress’ yearly health care spending package, POLITICO’s Alice Miranda Ollstein reports.
This year, Republicans have tucked anti-abortion language into nearly every corner of the appropriations process, complicating the delicate negotiations as House leaders race to bring the first of a dozen bills to the floor before the August recess.
Some GOP proposals include:
— Banning mail delivery of abortion pills
— Barring access to gender-affirming care
— Eliminating funding for the Teen Pregnancy Prevention Program
Dems eye Senate ‘firewall’: Democrats plan to force amendment votes but are largely counting on the Senate to push back against the House health proposals, setting up a clash in the coming months when the two chambers must reconcile their differences. But some in the party fear they might be forced to compromise to keep the government open because of the sheer number of riders Republicans are attaching to the spending bills.
Senate Appropriations Chair Patty Murray of Washington told POLITICO that House attempts won’t “fly,” and committee member Brian Schatz of Hawaii said they’ll ignore House Republicans’ efforts.
Still, some Democrats are nervous. Rep. Norma Torres (D-Calif.) fears the more budget riders House Republicans push through, the more leverage they’ll have.
“Our caucus is having a very difficult time,” she said — torn between a desire to avoid a shutdown and stopping what they consider an “extreme agenda” from becoming law.
E&C GOP DEMANDS ANSWERS FROM HHS — House Energy and Commerce Committee chair Cathy McMorris Rodgers (R-Wash.), Health Subcommittee Chair Brett Guthrie (R-Ky.) and Oversight Subcommittee Chair Morgan Griffith (R-Va.) wrote to HHS Secretary Xavier Becerra to give a “final warning” in an investigation into allegations of “risky” mpox research.
The background: The GOP lawmakers first raised concerns in November 2022 about a purported experiment after Bernard Moss, a leading NIH researcher, was quoted in a Science magazine article discussing an experiment he was “planning” that apparently made mpox, formerly known as monkeypox, 1,000 percent more deadly in mice than other variants.
The Republicans have deemed HHS’ responses inadequate and said there were inconsistencies. They’re calling for Moss to appear for a videotaped interview.
HHS responses: The June 30 letter signed by Moss says he never conducted the experiment and hasn’t proposed doing so.
“Should it appear in the future that such an experiment would greatly contribute to understanding the basis for mpox virus virulence, then I may make such a proposal,” Moss said, adding he’d abide by what the Institutional Biosafety Committee deems appropriate.
PRICE TRANSPARENCY COMPLIANCE LAGS — Patient Rights Advocate, a nonprofit group that’s pushed for price transparency policy across Congress, released a new report finding that just 36 percent of hospitals comply with hospital price transparency requirements.
That’s up from 24.5 percent as of February, the group said. The organization’s findings have diverged from CMS officials’ findings — they said in February that “at least” 30 percent weren’t fully compliant.
It comes after lawmakers advanced price transparency legislation for hospitals earlier this month and CMS proposed major changes to how hospitals post prices for certain services in a bid to make them easier for consumers to understand.
FIRST IN PULSE: INSURERS SNAG CMS OFFICIAL — AHIP, the nation’s largest insurance advocacy group, hired LaShawn McIver to serve as chief health equity officer — a new role at the organization meant to push equitable access to health coverage for those in underrepresented and medically underserved communities, Megan reports.
McIver most recently served as the director of the Office of Minority Health at CMS but previously spent nearly a decade leading advocacy efforts for the American Diabetes Association and worked as an HIV/AIDS fellow for the Congressional Black Caucus’ Center for Policy Analysis and Research.
“Too many Americans have faced persistent and detrimental health inequity for too long, and we must work to accelerate our efforts and close health equity gaps faster,” said AHIP CEO Matt Eyles in a statement about her hire.
Healthcare Dive reports that the FTC and DOJ’s new merger guidelines could hold up health care deals.
HealthcareInfoSecurity details a three-week cyber attack at Tampa General Hospital that led to the breach of 1.2 million patients’ data.
CNN reports on a new study finding that errors in diagnosis lead to nearly 800,000 deaths or instances of permanent disability each year nationwide.
Source: https://www.politico.com/