Legislative Update Archive

 
Alabama vs. Georgia

Published: May 22, 2007 - Printer Friendly Article Printer Friendly Update - Email Article Send This Article To A Friend

Medication errors kill 7,000 Americans annually, injure 1.5 million, and cost billions of dollars in emergency room visits and other complications according to the Institute of Medicine. That is the equivalent of 100 Alabamians killed, 22,000 injured, and tens of millions of dollars wasted each year. Virtually all of this pain and cost is unnecessary.

The great majority of these medication errors could be avoided if our healthcare system had the same level of accuracy and speed we have come to expect from everyday companies such as UPS, FedEx, Google, and Expedia to name just a few. Each of these is highly profitable, growing, and very popular with consumers. The fact that their services are inexpensive or free certainly contributes to that popularity.

Take UPS and FedEx as specific examples. Most people have gone on-line to track in real-time a package they sent to a loved one or a business associate. The accuracy and reliability of UPS and FedEx is unparalleled. In extremely rare instances where they have trouble with a package, it is almost always the result of human error - torn paper labels, incorrect addresses, or theft - not the underlying tracking technology. We can get at least that level of precision in the interaction between physicians, pharmacists, and patients. The joke goes that when a UPS delivery man walks into a doctor’s office with his handheld scanning device he doubles the amount of computer power on the premises. 

It is in everyone’s interest from a health and cost perspective that we move aggressively to electronic prescribing and away from illegible handwriting that invites medication errors. To hasten that process we propose a contest to see which state, Alabama or Georgia, can be the first to arrive at 100 percent e-prescribing. Right now there is no state in America that is close to 100 percent. Fewer than 1 in 5 practicing physicians currently e-prescribe. Georgia and Alabama are well below that national average. Indeed, e-prescribing was literally illegal in Georgia until last year.

The Center for Health Transformation is aggressively leading a project in Georgia that already has brought together representatives of all the relevant political and industry players in the state. These include Governor Perdue, key legislators of both political parties, physicians, hospitals, chain and independent pharmacists, insurers, and employers. All are supportive and actively working together.

But the race is on as a new resolution in the Alabama Legislature makes note of all of this and will urge Alabama to become the first state in the nation to have every prescription transmitted electronically from physician to pharmacy.

Our work is complemented by the National E-Prescribing Patient Safety Initiative which removes one of the biggest hurdles to widespread adoption of e-prescribing by doctors: cost. By simply going on-line at www.nationalerx.com doctors can download the necessary software for free. Learning how to use it takes 20 minutes and the program is already connected to 95 percent of pharmacies with more coming online everyday. The eRx initiative is designed specifically to target smaller, less well-funded doctors in urban and rural areas who are not currently e-prescribing and it is not intended to displace commercial programs already in use. The eRx system puts a heavy emphasis on using computer power to cross-check potential interactions and contraindications for individuals who take more than one prescription.

A specific way the state government can create the right incentive to facilitate the move to e-prescribing is for the state-run Medicaid program to reimburse pharmacists, doctors, and hospitals at a higher rate for electronic prescriptions as opposed to paper prescriptions. This is a simple legislative fix that should not have partisan boundaries. Suddenly the central players would have a genuine financial interest to move rapidly to e-prescribing. 

The Institute of Medicine has called on all physicians across America to adopt e-prescribing by 2010 as a key solution to improving health outcomes and lowering cost. The Center for Health Transformation will gladly share what we are learning in Georgia with anyone in Alabama who is interested. While the suggestion for a contest between our two states is lighthearted, saving lives is not a game. The faster any of us can get to 100 percent e-prescribing, the better off we will be.

James Frogue (jfrogue@gingrichgroup.com) is State Project Director at the Atlanta and Washington DC-based Center for Health Transformation. Michael Ciamarra is Vice President of the Birmingham-based Alabama Policy Institute (michaelc@alabamapolicy.org).

 For Further Reading:

http://alisdb.legislature.state.al.us/acas/searchableinstruments/2007RS/Printfiles//HJR349-int.pdf

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