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This is a big step forward for QHINs who can now start sharing healthdata. HTI-1 Final Rule Appropriately, we’ve been breaking down what health IT and EHR vendors need to expect when it comes to HTI-1 in our Healthcare Regulatory Talk series.
Small physician practices, rehabilitation hospitals, long-term acute care hospitals, acute psychiatric hospitals, small rural acute care hospitals, and nonprofit clinics will have until January 2026. And, while not required, participants may also share data for social services and research activity purposes.
Faxing, always to my surprise, continues to be the primary way that data is shared, especially with smaller entities. In the State of California, there is a mandate for improved data sharing for smaller entities by Jan 2026, and they are even providing incentives to get it done. However, this rule is only the first step.
Leveraging technology to modernize, digitize, connect, and consolidate data will prove critical to the nation’s ability to address major publichealth needs both present and future, including preparing for the next global health crisis. David Navarro, Senior Director of Data Science at Harmony Healthcare IT.
Mobile health – or mHealth – encompasses the provision of medicine and publichealth services through mobile devices, or as the WHO says more succinctly, “medical and publichealth practice supported by mobile devices, such as mobile phones, patient monitoring devices, personal digital assistants (PDAs), and other wireless devices.”
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