What Is A Health Information Exchange (HIE) / Healthcare Data Exchange?

what is a health information exchange

A Health Information Exchange (also called a health data exchange) is a technology solution that enables healthcare providers and organizations to share patient information electronically between systems that would otherwise not be connected. You can think of the HIE as a data clearinghouse among many clinical systems. Every system that sends or receives data on an HIE follows a data standard to ensure correct formatting. It supports the concept of interoperability.

A common misconception about electronic health records (EHR) systems by non-technical folks is the assumption that every patient’s records from their doctor’s system are automatically available to every other healthcare organization nationwide. The truth is that different healthcare organizations have systems from competing vendors, and until fairly recently, those systems did not have any consistent means to exchange information. Improvements in these areas is what interoperability is all about.

The adoption of HIEs has gotten a boost by the Federal Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT (ONC). The department was established via Executive Order in 2004, and has been very active in healthcare IT policy since. Also, Congress has allocated $548 million to the states to help fund the implementation of HIEs for the states. You can read more about that at healthcare.gov health information exchanges.

HIEs address many problems that have existed in the delivery and coordination of care. For example, when patients have care among several providers who do not share information, this creates fragmented care. That fragmentation can lead to duplicate orders and testing, medication errors, and possible errors in diagnosing medical problems.

Many practices have used faxing for years to communicate patient information, and while this is better than nothing, it has inherent disadvantages:

  • You usually need to be at the fax machine to receive records
  • Even if you use e-faxing, the data is still in document format as opposed to discrete data, meaning the data cannot be extracted and analyzed
  • Mechanical failures can trash the documents, as we’ve all experienced

So it’s easy to see why HIEs can make coordination of healthcare much easier and efficient. Let’s have a look at the different types of health data exchanges.

Types Of Health Information Exchanges

Directed Exchange

This is probably the most common form of HIE. In this setup, there will be providers from many different types and sizes of medical practices, also using different EMR vendors. Exchange data is sent over an encrypted secure connection. Here is a scenario of how this kind of HIE transaction would occur:

You visit your Primary Care Physician (PCP) to be seen for some allergies that have been difficult to diagnose. The PCP is on an EMR that is connected to a State operated HIE. The PCP will refer you to an Allergy Specialist who is on a different EMR that is also connected to your State’s HIE.

The data that needs to be communicated is your list of known allergies, medical conditions, labs, and insurance information. The data would be pushed to the HIE by the sending Provider during or after your initial visit.

Another example of a Directed Exchange that has been around for a while is Immunization Registries. While some may call them registries and not HIEs due to being a single set of data, I don’t think that really matters. Most that I’ve researched are seen as both registries and HIEs.

health-information-exchange-graphic

Query-based Exchange

Where the Directed Exchange is more of a “push” transaction, a query-based transaction is a “pull”. In the above example, the Allergy Specialist would initiate a transaction that queries the patient’s PCP for all of the relevant clinical data.

The query-based transaction is also extremely helpful in cases of unplanned care. If a patient lands in the ER away from their hometown, the facility can query an HIE to gather the information needed to provide the best possible care.

Consumer Mediated Exchange

In a Consumer Mediated Exchange, patients are involved in the collection and transmission of Healthcare data to providers. They may use a cross-platform solution such as Apple Health to input data, including the collection of data from fitness devices and apps. They may then document any medications or conditions that have been missed during office visits. Apps would transmit that information to a State HIE. From there, the information is added to the rest of their medical record when downloaded by a care provider.

Health Information Exchange Vendors

HIEs can be components of existing Electronic Health Records (EHR) systems, or developed as standalone applications. The two largest  EHR vendors – Cerner and Epic each have their own HIE components built into their architecture. Those systems are mainly intended to share records between many providers of those native systems, but also have the ability to share data ‘on the open market’ to competing EHRs.

Vendors who develop their own standalone solutions include Deloitte, Informatics Corporation of America, and Infor. In 2015, there was a lot of news concerning EHR vendors’ participation, or lack thereof in HIEs. Many of the large electronic health records vendors, such as Cerner and athenahealth participated in the CommonWell Health Alliance, with Epic resisting calls to participate. Epic’s internal HIE is called Care Everywhere. Epic’s initial resistance caused many industry analysts to criticize them, charging them as being opposed to sharing health data. However, in early 2016, Epic did get on board with the Carequality Interoperability Framework.

Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement (TEFCA)

On January 18, 2022, the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) published guidelines for how interoperability should be approached. It proposes voluntary standards and is written not as a technical guide, but as a policy and procedure document. Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement.

Do Health Information Exchanges Work?

As with a lot of technology in Healthcare, some things are hard to measure. HIEs will very likely result in an increased satisfaction by patients as their care becomes more integrated. A study published by Perspectives in Health Information Management indicated that only 50% of healthcare executives are even planning on using metrics to measure success. However, from the executives they were able to survey, 56% reported positive return on investment, and 44% felt that more evidence was needed to determine success.

A 2014 study by the NIH indicated that use of an HIE may reduce the rate of hospital admissions from emergency department visits. (HIE and hospital admissions)

Health Information Exchanges By State

Below is a list of health information exchanges by state. Some states have multiple HIEs. In those cases, I tried to list the largest ones. The HIE name is hyperlinked to go to that state’s official URL. Contacting the HIE in your state could be a good career move.

HIE StateHIE Name/URL
AlabamaOne Health Record
Alaskahealthconnect Alaska
ArizonaAHCCCS
ArkansasSHARE
CaliforniaHIE Gateway
ColoradoCorhio
ConnecticutConnie
DelawareDHIN
District of ColumbiaCRISP DC
FloridaFlorida HIE Services
GeorgiaGaHIN
HawaiiHealth eNet
IdahoIHDE
IndianaIHIE
IowaCyncHealth
KansasKHIN
KentuckyKHIE
LouisianaLHCQF
MaineHealthInfoNet
MarylandMaryland HIE
MassachusettsMassHiway
MichiganMiHIN
MinnesotaMN HIE
MississippiMHAX
MissouriSHINE
MontanaBig Sky Care Connect
NebraskaCyncHealth
NevadaHEALTHie
New HampshireCHIS
New JerseyNJHIN
New MexicoSYNCRONYS
New YorkSHIN-NY
North CarolinaNC HealthConnex
North DakotaNDHIN
OhioCliniSync
OklahomaMyHealth
PennsylvaniaKeyHIE
Rhode IslandCurrentCare
South CarolinaSCHIEx
South DakotaHealthLink
TennesseeDirect Project
TexasHIETexas
UtahUHIN
VermontVT Health Info
VirginiaConnectVirginia
WashingtonOneHeathPort
West VirginiaWVHIN
WisconsinHIE
Wyoming WYFI
Summary
What Is A Health Information Exchange?
Article Name
What Is A Health Information Exchange?
Description
What Is A Health Information Exchange? HIEs are technology solutions to electronically share patient data among many organizations to improve Healthcare.
Author
HealthcareITSkills.com
HealthcareITSkills.com
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