How to Use the Rest of 2014 to Great Advantage – ONLINE EXCLUSIVE
Bob Blakely Director of Government Affairs and Marketing at AllMeds Inc. Within the span of eight weeks, two of healthcare’s biggest sources of heartburn in 2014 evaporated. In April, ICD-10’s rollout was delayed to October 2015, and in May, CMS announced intentions to make EHR incentives much easier to obtain in 2014. Most providers greeted both announcements with relief, as few were prepared for the looming changes. However, cynics predicted that few providers will proactively use the additional time and will again find themselves scrambling next year. Don’t do that. ICD-10: ICD-10 really is coming and it’s going to change everything. Much of what will go wrong is out of your hands, but physicians still control what occurs in their own practices and your EHR will be the local epicenter of the ICD-10 earthquake. Your EHR vendor should have nearly finished ICD-10 preparations before the delay. Make sure they haven’t put it on the back burner, but will deliver it in the coming months. Ask about transitional tools, training events, and support programs that are specifically designed to update your staff well before next October. And, plan for the worst: Ask if your EHR vendor has integrated with services that can seamlessly assist your billing team when ICD-10 issues inevitably disrupt your revenue cycle. EHR Incentives: 2014’s more relaxed guidelines will be gone in 2015. All participants will be required to use 2014-certified EHRs, tenured providers will fully move to Stage 2’s more rigorous Meaningful Use (MU) standards, and reporting periods will return to 12 full months. You can do plenty of things in the meantime to prepare for MU2015, but time is of the essence. Remember, you’ll have to be achieving MU on January 1, so there’s no margin of error next year. If your EHR vendor hasn’t already attained 2014 certification, make sure they’ll do so in the immediate future. Find out how and when they’ll implement your office with a 2014-certified solution. Finally, ask your vendor if they provide any services that include MU training and monitoring, which will be particularly critical for those moving to Stage 2. The double-dose delay to ICD-10 and MU Stage 2 certainly made 2014 a less onerous year for physicians and their staffs. But, it’s critical not to waste the extra time, as 2015 will deliver the challenges that were expected this year. Those who spend the intervening months in preparation will undoubtedly enjoy tremendous advantages over those who spend theirs procrastinating.
Bob Blakely
Director of Government Affairs and Marketing at AllMeds Inc.
Within the span of eight weeks, two of healthcare’s biggest sources of heartburn in 2014 evaporated.
In April, ICD-10’s rollout was delayed to October 2015, and in May, CMS announced intentions to make EHR incentives much easier to obtain in 2014. Most providers greeted both announcements with relief, as few were prepared for the looming changes. However, cynics predicted that few providers will proactively use the additional time and will again find themselves scrambling next year.
Don’t do that.
ICD-10: ICD-10 really is coming and it’s going to change everything. Much of what will go wrong is out of your hands, but physicians still control what occurs in their own practices and your EHR will be the local epicenter of the ICD-10 earthquake.
Your EHR vendor should have nearly finished ICD-10 preparations before the delay. Make sure they haven’t put it on the back burner, but will deliver it in the coming months. Ask about transitional tools, training events, and support programs that are specifically designed to update your staff well before next October. And, plan for the worst: Ask if your EHR vendor has integrated with services that can seamlessly assist your billing team when ICD-10 issues inevitably disrupt your revenue cycle.
EHR Incentives: 2014’s more relaxed guidelines will be gone in 2015. All participants will be required to use 2014-certified EHRs, tenured providers will fully move to Stage 2’s more rigorous Meaningful Use (MU) standards, and reporting periods will return to 12 full months.
You can do plenty of things in the meantime to prepare for MU2015, but time is of the essence. Remember, you’ll have to be achieving MU on January 1, so there’s no margin of error next year. If your EHR vendor hasn’t already attained 2014 certification, make sure they’ll do so in the immediate future. Find out how and when they’ll implement your office with a 2014-certified solution. Finally, ask your vendor if they provide any services that include MU training and monitoring, which will be particularly critical for those moving to Stage 2.
The double-dose delay to ICD-10 and MU Stage 2 certainly made 2014 a less onerous year for physicians and their staffs. But, it’s critical not to waste the extra time, as 2015 will deliver the challenges that were expected this year. Those who spend the intervening months in preparation will undoubtedly enjoy tremendous advantages over those who spend theirs procrastinating.