The Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) is at the forefront of the administration’s health IT efforts and is a resource to the entire health system to support the adoption of health information technology and the promotion of nationwide health information exchange to improve health care. ONC is organizationally located within the Office of the Secretary for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS). Here is what they are doing and reporting. Follow them @ONC_HealthIT. Sign up for their email updates.
Events
ONC Health IT Certification Program Developer Roundtable – This Thursday!
When: Thursday, June 20, 2024 12:00 – 1:00 pm ET
Register for this event.
Join the ONC Health IT Certification Program for the upcoming quarterly ONC Health IT Certification Program Developer Roundtable. These public meetings are open to all health IT developers, regardless of their participation in the ONC Health IT Certification Program. During these meetings, ONC leads discussions tailored for the health IT developer community on topics such as Certification Program updates, upcoming certification deadlines, and developer requirements. Agenda and registration to come in late May.
Deadlines Approaching
NEW FUNDING OPPORTUNITY: ONC continues to invest in interoperable #healthIT with 2 new funding areas for #LEAP in Health IT in 2024. Applications are due by 7/12. View the SEN: https://t.co/d6PbGyLGUv #LEAPinHealthIT #AI pic.twitter.com/Ga6REdSXCD
— ONC (@ONC_HealthIT) June 10, 2024
Share your feedback! ONC is taking public comments until 7/31 on a new USCDI+ Maternal Health data set to support a more equitable and respectful maternal health ecosystem. https://t.co/rAxqPIlGxD #USCDI #maternalhealth pic.twitter.com/nLTzD6YKrz
— ONC (@ONC_HealthIT) June 14, 2024
News & Announcements
ICYMI
20 years ago, ONC was established through the signing of an Executive Order. Since that time, we have made tremendous improvements to health care by creating a digital foundation that puts YOU in charge of your care! #ONC20 🎉 See our full history: https://t.co/Coz9Hm9Z4y pic.twitter.com/yUYOYLTWVt
— ONC (@ONC_HealthIT) April 29, 2024
NEW DATA: We tracked how many hospitals routinely engaged in interoperable exchange of electronic patient health information in 2023, and how often clinicians in these hospitals used this info at the point of care. Read the data brief: https://t.co/TL8tufRsXy pic.twitter.com/tWn2p5v3hs
— ONC (@ONC_HealthIT) June 14, 2024
The feedback period for the 11th Annual Interoperability Standards Advisory (#ISA) will be open from June 12 – August 12. Login or register via the ISA webpage to submit your feedback: https://t.co/nTYVmFweO5 pic.twitter.com/1v3UgVf7fd
— ONC (@ONC_HealthIT) June 14, 2024
Resources
21st Century Cures Act Summary
The 21st Century Cures Act, signed December 13, 2016, by President Obama, promotes and funds the acceleration of research into preventing and curing serious illnesses; accelerates drug and medical device development; attempts to address the opioid abuse crisis; and tries to improve mental health service delivery. The Act includes a number of provisions that push for greater interoperability, adoption of electronic health records (EHRs) and support for human services programs.
Certification of Health IT
The ONC Health IT Certification Program (Certification Program) ensures that Certified Health Information Technology meets the technological capability, functionality, and security requirements adopted by the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services (HHS).
United States Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI)
The United States Core Data for Interoperability (USCDI) is a standardized set of health data classes and constituent data elements for nationwide, interoperable health information exchange. Review the USCDI Fact Sheet to learn more.
TEFCA
The Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA) establishes a universal policy and technical floor for nationwide interoperability; simplifies connectivity for organizations to securely exchange information to improve patient care, enhance the welfare of populations, and generate health care value; and enables individuals to gather their healthcare information. The Common Agreement establishes the infrastructure model and the governing approach for users in different networks to securely share basic clinical information under commonly agreed-to expectations and rules.
Read
From the Health IT Buzz Blog – Learn more about HHS’s Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC). Check out the latest blog posts:
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- USCDI+ Milestone! ONC and HRSA Modernization Initiative Goes Live
- 2025 ISA Comment Period Opens on the New ISP Platform!
- Supporting Information Privacy for Patients, Now and Always: Four Reminders of How HHS Information Blocking Regulations Recognize Privacy Rules
- Navigating Healthcare Transformation: A Nurse’s Perspective on ONC’s HTI-1 Final Rule
- ONC’s Journey Chairing the Global Digital Health Partnership in 2022 and 2023
- ONC @ 20: Celebrating the People
- ONC @ 20: A Tale of Optimism and Humility
- Enhancing Healthcare Interoperability: Launching the DaVinci Prior Authorization Support (PAS) Test Kit
- Health Equity for All
- Improving Information Sharing and Patient Safety: Hear from ONC’s Rachel Nelson
- Advancing Nationwide, Trusted Health Information Networks
- Setting Our Sights Toward a Healthier, More Innovative, Data-Driven Future
- Looking Forward: HTI-2 & ONC’s Commitment to Furthering the Vision of Better Health Enabled by Data
ONC Interoperability Pledge
Companies that provide 90 percent of electronic health records used by hospitals nationwide as well as the top five largest health care systems in the country have agreed to implement three core commitments: Consumer Access, No Blocking/Ensuring Transparency, and Standards. The ONC (@ONC_HealthIT) wants vendors to sign a pledge. Is your vendor pledging? Find out who is on the list.