May 25, 2005

Gingrich: Electronic health records needed faster

Head of Center for Health Transformation says 'we need to have a sense of urgency'

BALTIMORE, MARYLAND - U.S. hospitals, doctors, insurance companies, and the government are endangering lives by moving too slowly in adopting electronic health records, Newt Gingrich, former speaker of the U.S. House of Representatives, said Wednesday.

Gingrich, now running a health-care advocacy group called the Center for Health Transformation, challenged attendees of the Workgroup for Electronic Data Interchange's (WEDI) annual convention here, to push for higher standards in health care and to promote electronic health records. Electronic health records are the first step toward what Gingrich called a "21st century intelligent health system," which would make an electronic health record and instant diagnostic tool available to all U.S. residents.

WEDI is a trade group that advocates improved health care through electronic commerce, and Gingrich, along with Tommy Thompson, former U.S. secretary of health and human services, received the organization's annual innovator's award. This month, Republican Gingrich joined with former political rival Senator Hillary Clinton, a Democrat from New York, in supporting a congressional bill aimed at jump-starting electronic health record use in the U.S. Gingrich and Clinton both are mentioned as possible U.S. presidential candidates in 2008.

In January 2004, U.S. President George Bush called for the adoption of standards for electronic health records. But Gingrich said adoption is moving to slowly.

A 21st century intelligent health system, which U.S. residents could voluntarily access, would include DNA tests that alert individuals to health risks, Gingrich said. The system could include a home diagnostic kit, with features such as blood testing equipment, that a person could administer to themselves and get a near-instant diagnosis or warning to see a doctor, he said.

"We have to have a sense of urgency," Gingrich told WEDI attendees. "Every day we don't get that data to the people who need it, they die."

Internet users can instantly buy airplane tickets online or drivers can pay for gas instantly using a passcard at a gas pump, but the U.S. health-care industry still largely relies on paper-based records to track patient treatment, he said. "This is normal outside of health," he said of electronic transactions. "We're not asking health to be innovative, we're asking health to catch up. We're not taking about the distant future, we're talking about the recent past, integrated into health."

Gingrich, who served on an aviation committee when he was in Congress, compared health-care patient treatment standards to aviation safety standards. In the aviation industry, "best practice is the minimum practice," he said, while in health care, an estimated 8,000 U.S. residents die every year from medication errors. Many in the health-care industry just accept those deaths, but many of those deaths, along with tens of thousands of other deaths related to other medical errors, could be greatly reduced with electronic health records that check for conflicting medications or treatments, he said.

"If we lost 8,000 people in aviation, we'd have a crisis," Gingrich said.

Gingrich also called for a national law requiring physical education class five days a week for high school students, as a way to prevent obesity and diabetes, and he called for tax credits and Medicaid program vouchers as a way to move all U.S. residents to insurance coverage.

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