Ohio
Health Information Technology Summit
October 29, 2004 Columbus, Ohio
Hosted
by:
Health Policy
Institute of Ohio


Meeting Agenda with updated links to Summit
Presentations on this site
Afterword
MAPS
Meeting Site
Downtown Columbus
Columbus Area
RESOURCES
Documents
from Secretarial Summit on HIT/NHII Conference 07/20-23/2004:
ONCHIT Framework Executive Summary
ONCHIT Framework Full Report
NHII
2004 Conference Materials
Consensus Action Agenda for Achieving
the NHII
NHII and Clinical Research White Paper
Confidentiality, Ethics, Privacy and
Access
Governance Track Background Paper
Incentives for HIT Adoption
A
Draft Framework for Measuring Progress
Personal Health Record
The National Health Information
Infrastrucuture And Population Health
Architecture and Standards Track
Audio
Newt Gingrich’s speech to the
Conference (.wav format)
Summary
Kaiser Family Foundation Network Report
on Conference
Reports
National Medical Health Card
Davis Wright Tremaine: HIT Legal
Analysis: Structuring Regional Health Information
Organizations (RHIOs) to Limit the Risk of Self-Referral and
Anti-kickback Law Violations
Financial Incentives: Innovative
Payment for Health Information Technology
PITAC: Revolutionizing Health Care
Through Information Technology
Presentations
National
Conference of State Legislatures, Annual Meeting
Salt Lake City, Utah July 21, 2004
Information Technology: What It Means
for Health Care
WebLinks
Office of the National Coordinator for
Health Information Technology (ONCHIT)
Health Strategies Consultancy Research
Portfolio
Announcement of Designated Standard
Maintenance Organizations
HIPPA
& Security [How HIPAA relates to NHII]
HL7
LOINC
SNOMED
X.12 Data
Transfer
Afterword
We had a great meeting! It was gratifying that so many of you
took the time to attend this Summit. It demonstrated to me just
how important eHealth is to Ohio.
Those who attended the Summit heard
more than a dozen very interesting and informative presentations from
people involved in eHealth projects around Ohio. We also heard
how the national initiative is going and how our efforts should
dovetail with them. Be sure to follow the link to the Office of
the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONCHIT) for
more information.
The materials on this disc and the
HPIO website represent just a sampling of the vast amount of
information to help us with eHealth in Ohio.
At the close of the Summit we
discussed possible next steps. We at HPIO are developing a
proposal for strategic planning grant around ehealth in Ohio. We
are also interested in putting together a leadership team willing to
help coordinate ongoing eHealth in Ohio efforts. Please let us
know if you have interest in participating on such a group.
Finally, people expressed interest in establishing a eHealth in Ohio
list-serve.
We here at the Health Policy Institute
of Ohio look forward to working with all of you for the future of
improved health and health care for all Ohioans.
William D. Hayes, Ph.D.
President
Health Policy Institute of Ohio
November, 2004
(final version)