“We’re the government and we’re here to help.” That’s a common punchline, but based on recent IT announcements from CMS, this line may turn out to be no joke. From interoperability to provider directory to patient identification, CMS is working on several initiatives to tackle systemic IT challenges in healthcare.
Healthcare IT Today sat down with Amy Gleason, Strategic Advisor to the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services (CMS). She is tackling the massive challenge of slow progress on interoperability, provider identification, fraud, and clipboard-based care. Her mission is to drive immediate action across the healthcare ecosystem.
What This Conversation Revealed
- Breakdown: Seven years of waiting for rules to take effect left data trapped in silos. Process: CMS launched a voluntary tech pledge for immediate collaboration. Outcome: Industry players actively execute data sharing milestones within months.
- Breakdown: Maintaining thousands of inaccurate provider directories wastes billions of dollars annually. Process: CMS is consolidating internal databases into a single public framework. Outcome: A reliable National Provider Directory restores data accuracy and reduces administrative burnout.
- Breakdown: Rampant fraud bleeds the system of necessary funds. Process: The government released massive troves of claims data to the public. Outcome: Sharp minds in the private sector track down malicious patterns and claim bounties.
Voluntary Action to Accelerate Change
Mandates move at a glacial pace. For example, a rule written in 2020 on interoperability will not take effect until 2027. To bypass this sluggish timeline, CMS launched a pledge to unite the industry right now.
“At CMS, we tried to take a step last spring. We asked, how can we really get interoperability to work and how can we do it in a way that doesn’t take seven years to go into effect,” explained Gleason.
After a series of listening sessions, “CMS launched an ecosystem, and the idea is to get industry to come together voluntarily”. This idea became the CMS Health Technology Ecosystem where participating organizations (vendors, providers, payers) pledge to make their systems and data interoperable.
The goal? “To work together to actually see this stuff [interoperability] happen in six months or a year,” stated Gleason.
A Single Source of Truth Stops the Waste
According to Gleason, the healthcare industry burns billions of dollars trying to keep provider information accurate.
“There are over 5,000 provider directors in the US. Providers answer between 20 and 60 requests every month to validate their information. Yet none of the directories are accurate and not very helpful,” detailed Gleason.
To stop this financial drain, CMS is building a National Provider Directory. “If we can just have people update one place, then we can all get the benefit and stop wasting so much time and money,” she stated.
Identity Verification Fixes the Trust Gap
Data sharing does not fail just because of bad technology.
“One of the main reasons we heard from people about why interoperability doesn’t work today is that it’s not a technology problem, it’s a trust problem. And so we’re putting identity on front of the provider directory,” observed Gleason. If a provider cannot verify who is asking for records, the data stays locked down.
CMS is baking strict identity checks directly into its infrastructure. “So a provider can use things like CLEAR or ID.me or login.gov to validate their identity and then do that one time, and then others can query to see if that provider has validated their identity,” she explained.
Killing the Clipboard
Patients are tired of filling out the same forms at every visit. CMS wants to eliminate this frustrating bottleneck entirely with their kill-the-clipboard initiative. The vision is for patients to control their data securely and easily.
They should be able to do this “without having to log into all these portals into whatever app I choose, then I can share that with my doctor with a QR code,” shared Gleason. “So it will move into more stages after that. But a simple scan, just like you do at a concert or the airport, here’s my QR code. Take my data,” she noted.
Open Data Exposes Malicious Actors
Fraud and waste cost the system dearly. Bad actors slip through the cracks because the government simply cannot spot every anomaly on its own. To combat this, CMS is crowdsourcing the fight.
“The idea of releasing data is to let people have access to this data and help us find patterns and issues with the data,” Gleason explained. Opening the vault allows sharp minds in the private sector to track down waste. “And there are bounties. If you find things that we’re able to enforce, then you can get a cut of that money as well.”
CMS recently release another large batch of data to assist with machine learning.
The Health IT Reality
By focusing on voluntary pledges, centralized directories, and secure identity verification, CMS is pushing the industry to execute right now. Organizations that cling to siloed operations will be left behind. Although policy and compliance do motivate the healthcare industry to move in a particular direction, these voluntary and problem-solving IT initiatives from CMS will hopefully boost adoption quicker.
What Healthcare IT Leaders Are Asking
What is the CMS Health Tech Ecosystem pledge?
The CMS Health Tech Ecosystem pledge is a voluntary initiative bringing together electronic health record vendors, payers, providers, and tech companies. Instead of waiting years for federal rulemaking to take effect, participants agree to actively collaborate and execute data sharing milestones within six to twelve months.
How will the National Provider Directory reduce costs?
The healthcare industry spends roughly $6 billion annually maintaining thousands of fragmented and inaccurate provider directories. A single CMS-backed National Provider Directory will allow clinicians to update their credentials in one centralized location, eliminating redundant administrative tasks and dramatically reducing operational waste across the entire sector.
Why is identity verification critical for healthcare interoperability?
Many organizations block data sharing because they cannot reliably verify the identity of the requesting provider or patient. By integrating established identity verification tools directly into federal directories and patient portals, organizations can confidently exchange clinical data without fearing security breaches or fraud.
Learn more about CMS at https://www.cms.gov/
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