They built IT themselves
Transcription
They built IT themselves
Doc owners weigh specialty hospital provisions of budget law Page 4 Local residency programs good for students, communities Page 9 What’s up with computerized physician order-entry systems? Page 10 Editorial Features News . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 4 Briefly . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 6 Opinion . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 8 First Person . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 9 Special Report . . . . . . . . . . . 10 By the Numbers . . . . . . . . . . 13 News Makers . . . . . . . . . . . 14 Sponsored sections Business news and information for physician executives, leaders and entrepreneurs Vol. 10/No. 3 • March 2006 Marketplace . . . . . . . . . . . . . 12 BY JAY GREENE Chris Kryder, M.D., first identified the disconnect between clinical medicine and financial management during medical school. So when it was time to pick his internal medicine residency program in 1981, Kryder chose a program that would also allow him to enter a business school to bridge the gap between the disciplines. Kryder parlayed those backgrounds 20 years later when in 2001 he founded D2Hawkeye, a Boston-based clinical and financial data-mining company. D2Hawkeye develops software used to analyze patient information, identify sick individuals and evaluate disease-management programs. Randall Oates, M.D., noticed how little in the way of medical instructions patients retained during examinations when he was a family-medicine resident in 1982. Concerned, Oates wrote a rudimentary software program that he and other physiContinued on p. 2 Frustrated with healthcare inefficiencies, these docs have launched their own IT companies They built IT themselves Chris Kryder, M.D., founded a clinical and financial data-mining firm. Ira Wyman COV E R STO RY COV E R STO RY the company’s premier program, aggregates data from the member cians could use to develop takelevel up, creating a medical home information sheets for record for every enrolled individpatients. Oates parlayed that softual that includes a complete hisware-writing talent 12 years later tory of all medical and pharmainto a low-cost electronic medical ceutical claims. record and the founding in Managers use 1994 of DOCS Inc., which D2HawkeyeExplorer to is now called SOAPware, identify patients who Fayetteville, Ark. need more intensive Kepa Zubeldia, M.D., care management by realized how important analyzing collected data computers could be for through more than 800 medical administration in quality and risk measures. 1979, when he was run“We want to enable ning a clinical pathology physicians to make betlaboratory in Spain, his ter decisions for their home country. Zubeldia Zubeldia: Docs later refined his ideas on can adopt IT that patients,” says Kryder. “Our guiding principle is applying information techcan lower costs. that if managers can get nology to medical administransparent financial information trative uses while he was studying in an organized and easy-to-read biomedical engineering at the way, they are in a much stronger University of Oklahoma in 1982. position to medically manage Zubeldia parlayed those experiences 18 years later when forming their patients.” D2HawkeyeExplorer provides Claredi, a Salt Lake City-based company that provides software to cost and clinical data on individual patients that show, for example, monitor and manage clinical, financial and administrative health- average dollar costs for specific diseases or admissions. “One of care transactions. the root problems in managing Kryder, Oates and Zubeldia are patient care is that doctors don’t using their medical training inside the business world to create infor- know what things cost, and mation technology solutions aimed patients don’t know what things cost,” Kryder says. at helping physicians manage Kryder, who earned an MBA from patient care. the Sloan School at the “I want to be part of a radical Massachusetts Institute of solution that proves higher quality Technology in 1984, says the puractually does cost less,” says pose of placing average costs Kryder, D2Hawkeye’s chief execualongside clinical information is tive officer. D2HawkeyeExplorer, Continued from p. 1 Modern Physician | March 2006 • 2 to submit without the group numthat “You can’t manage the case ber. I am always vouching for without knowing the cost.” administrative simplification,” Creating a system where medical Zubeldia says. and financial activities are joined Oates is another one of a growat the hip “provides a much better ing number of physicians dedicated view of individual diseases and to simplifying clinical management costs,” he adds. systems. Described by Medical Zubeldia also wished to develop a program that could help doctors Economics as one of the most better manage their practices. popular low-cost EMRs for small Through Faciledi, Claredi’s premier groups, SOAPware has sold more program, providers, payers and than 8,000 systems, primarily to clearinghouses can accurately ana- groups with five or less physicians, lyze, validate, route and report Oates says. healthcare transactions, “My goal is to help he says. transform healthcare and “Big payers have clearly bring physicians into the dominated the EDI (elecmodern world,” says tronic data interchange) Oates, SOAPware’s presindustry,” says Zubeldia, ident. “Most small pracClaredi’s president and tices are nearing obsochief technology officer. lescence, and physicians “Payers have been reducare really burning out. By ing administrative transre-engineering their pracaction costs, but they tice they can achieve betare shifting costs to Oates: “My goal is ter results because the providers. Physicians can to help transform current reimbursement adopt technology that system is not going to healthcare.” can lower those costs.” support them.” Zubeldia understands the needs Oates says SOAPware can help of payers to lower costs and the doctors reduce their charting time desire of physicians to be paid. from an average of about 40% of “Sometimes those requirements their office time to 20%. “Doctors conflict with each other,” he says. can spend more time seeing For example, payers want patient patients, making more money, or identifications and group health they can have more free time,” he numbers on transactions so they says. “Patients also benefit by havcan easily match eligibility files. ing medical recommendations all “I saw that patients don’t always written down, and with a punch of come in for a visit with the ID a button, a doctor can send a precards. In meetings with payers, I scription to the pharmacy.” insisted that providers be allowed Continued on p. 3 COV E R STO RY Data Interchange. A practicing physician, Oates The three IT entrepreneurs believe their medical training helps says he spends 25% of his time seeing patients. “I couldn’t do them explain and sell their prodwhat I do if I didn’t see patients. ucts to managers and physicians. You lose perspective,” says Oates, “Typically we need to convince who recently opened a both the CMO (chief new clinic, DOCSmedical officer) and “ T y p i c a l l y w e Clinic and Institute in the CFO (chief financial officer) of the need to convince Fayetteville. “I have to be practicing. I see value of the system,” both the CMO myself as a bridge says Kryder, who is a clinical instructor at (chief medical between practicing doctors and the IT Harvard Medical officer) and the world.” School and an MIT lecWith SOAPware now turer. “We have many CFO (chief in its fifth version, good people who are financial officer) Oates says he develgood at selling, but I am one of only a few of the value of the ops specifications for the design team. “I who can speak both s y s t e m . ” tell (the programlanguages simultaneously,” Kryder says. —Chris Kryder mers), ‘This is the Zubeldia often goes D2Hawkeye CEO way it needs to operate,’ ” he says. into the field on demon“What’s wrong with IT strations and to help is there is a disconnect (between) implement systems. design and engineering and real “I hear feedback directly from world practice. I see myself as a the users, and my medical backchange agent to help the medicalground helps tremendously,” industrial complex transition to a Zubeldia says. “Feedback helps more working model.” me to improve the product’s funcKryder agrees. “If we can make tionality. It is always an eye-openthe whole system simpler to make ing experience to see the amount of pain that electronic transactions medical and financial managers work better together, we can make inflict on providers.” patient care better,” Kryder says. ■ Zubeldia also effects policy changes at the national level as past president of the Association Jay Greene is a former Modern For Electronic Health Care Healthcare reporter and now a Transactions and co-chairman of freelance healthcare writer based the Security Policy Advisory Group in Thompson, Conn. Contact of the Workgroup for Electronic Greene at jaywriter@charter.net. 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