WASHINGTON — Several individual physicians and professional organizations urged members of Congress to extend tax credits or deductions and small business loans to physicians who purchase information systems and to require Medicare to offer an incentive payment to physicians who make the move to electronic medical records.
Adopting electronic medical records (EMRs) can make practices more efficient, but the initial expense—both monetary and in staff training—can be devastating to small physician offices, the witnesses told the panel members at a House Small Business Subcommittee on Regulation, Healthcare and Trade hearing.
Subcommittee chairman Charles Gonzalez (D-Tex.) agreed that the federal government should give physicians some kind of financial carrot to invest in health information technology.
“Right now there are inadequate incentives for health care providers to adopt many of these technologies,” Rep. Gonzalez said.
“Without changes in the way we promote health IT, small physician practices will be left behind the technological curve, and as a result, patients will fail to benefit from the quality of care electronic health records provide,” added Mr. Gonzalez, who recently reintroduced his National Health Information Incentive Act. The bill was aimed at assisting smaller practices but would also direct Medicare to make add-on payments for office visits facilitated by EMRs.
The American College of Physicians has called for just such a payment for several years, Dr. Lynne Kirk, ACP president, said at the hearing.
Mr. Gonzalez also noted that the full Small Business Committee recently passed the Small Business Lending Improvements Act of 2007 (H.R. 1332). That bill would let small practices borrow from the Small Business Administration to finance information systems.
Coming up with the capital for health IT is particularly tough for smaller physician groups, Dr. Kirk noted. One 2006 study showed that only 13%–16% of solo practitioners had adopted health IT, she said.
Small practices are the lifeblood of internal medicine, she said, adding that 20% of internists are in solo practices and 50% are in practices of five or fewer physicians.
Acquisition costs average $44,000 per physician and yearly upkeep amounts to about $8,500 per physician, according to a 2005 study published in Health Affairs, Dr. Kirk said. To help defray both the initial investment and ongoing maintenance costs, ACP advocates an add-on payment from Medicare scaled to the complexity of the technology. The initial capital costs could be offset by grants, loans, or tax credits from the federal government, Dr. Kirk said.
The lack of reimbursement for using health IT is a major obstacle to adoption, said Dr. Mark Leavitt, chairman of the Certification Commission for Healthcare Information Technology (CCHIT), a publicly funded agency that has been vetting hardware and software systems.
CCHIT has certified 57 office-based systems, he said. Some payers are now offering financial incentives to physicians who use these certified systems, Dr. Leavitt said. The Hawaii Medical Service Association (Blue Cross and Blue Shield of Hawaii) announced in November 2006 that it was setting aside $20 million to help individual physicians buy EMR systems, though it required those investments to be in CCHIT-certified systems.