Hope For FOSS In Electronic Health Records
Fred Trotter writes "CCHIT is the dominant Electronic Health Record certification body in the US. It is also decidedly anti-FOSS and has been for years. Certification of one kind or another will be required for EHR systems to qualify for funding under the Stimulus Act. If CCHIT is chosen as the certification body, and the current certification strategies continue, it will not be possible to have a funded EHR that is both certified and truly FOSS. Now, however, CCHIT has agreed to meet the FOSS Health IT community at HIMSS 09 to address this issue." We discussed the shortcomings in the stimulus bill as it relates to FOSS a few days back.
So let me get this strait...CCHIT is considered anti-FOSS because they charge fees that for certification that the FOSS folks cannot afford?
Sounds like we need a welfare program for FOSS apps to be able to play in the big leagues. How do you think CCHIT gets their operating budget? Through fees I would expect.
People who bite the hand that feeds them usually lick the boot that kicks them
If the law states that there should be a 'view but not save/copy/print' right (like here in the Netherlands), how could you enforce that *and* be truly open source? You have to certificate each and every release of the full software on a source code level (and provide authorization based on the (i.e.) md5 sum of the executable) to enforce such rights. One simple edit & recompile and you can save/print those x-ray pics, which is against the law.
At the very least, forking, maintaining your own version and fixing bugs for your (employer's) own use is either impossible or very expensive.
Its really disheartening when you write software all year to provide useful tools for doctors that improve the standard of care, and then have a bunch of useless and counterproductive features slapped on because of an upcoming CCHIT certification.
Great ideas often receive violent opposition from mediocre minds. - Albert Einstein
if you can't afford these costs, don't waste our time because odds are good you won't be in business in a year from now"
And that's what you're going to tell all the solo pediatricians and family practitioners who currently use paper charts and who are going to have to suck up that cost when they buy a certified EMR?
If you have five people in your minuscule company with salaries, benefits, office space, equipment, legal and accounting fees, insurance, and other overhead of $100,000 per year for each employee (and really, that's low for anybody decently skilled) then $30,000 represents 6% of the total cost. Over the course of ten years, the cost of acquiring and maintaining certification, assuming your expenses don't go up at all, represents an average of 1.5% of your total expenses.
So in answer to your question: no, if I were running such a software business I don't think I'd tell practitioners that certification costs represent an average of 1.5% of the business's operating costs because nobody's going to give a shit. Do you scream bloody murder when your movie ticket price goes from $10.00 to $10.15?
Want to improve your Karma? Instead of "Post Anonymously", try the "Post Humously" option.