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Thursday, February 28, 2019

The skinny on the NoBlocking provisions of the CuresNPRM

In my own contribution to two reams, I put together a tweet stream of of over 150 tweets yesterday covering the information blocking related provisions of the Cures NPRM released by ONC during HIMSS week.  It's finally available from the Federal Register (but not yet "published"), and you can find the copy I used to summarize it from ONC here.  Next Monday you should be able to get to the web-based Federal Register content, and I've heard also that ONC will publish the Word version (which is going to be my source for comments given that I can modify electronic commenting tools I've developed for my HL7 work to gather feedback).

I'm NOT going to give the long details of that stream in this skinny post, but you can find the full set at tweet 18 in this 14-page unroll.

The information blocking provisions are the biggest addition to ONC oversight in terms of new regulation since inception of the CEHRT program, and also have potentially the biggest raw impact since then.  The provisions impact:
  • Patients
  • Data Providers
    • Healthcare Providers
    • Health Information Networks
    • Health Information Exchanges
  • Health IT Vendors
    • Certified EHR Technology vendors
The most challenging aspects of this rule related to the fact that data blocking is essentially defined as a behavior that would restrict, restrain, discourage or otherwise prevent access to electronic health information UNLESS ... and then details 7 exceptions.  The exceptions together take about 17 pages of REGULATION, and somewhere around 180 pages of explanatory text in the preface.  That works out to about 2.5 pages per exception for the regulation alone, and around 25 pages of explanatory text per exception.

45 CFR 171 is all new content, and touches deeply on the rights and responsibilities of stakeholders with regard to exchange of electronic health information (EHI is the new acronym you need to learn), in ways that to my knowledge, are unprecedented in digital commerce.

In the main, past regulatory efforts regarding digital data tied to an individual have been related to what CANNOT flow, or in the cases of an individual, what data MUST flow to that individual.  In the case of the Information Blocking rule, the regulatory effort is about what must flow, and what legitimate reasons must exist that might inhibit that flow.  This is a very new approach.

The current challenge has to do with the fact that while the regulation touches on rights and responsibilities of stakeholders, it isn't written in a form that corresponds to any new or existing rights.  Instead, the form it is written in closely corresponds to the ruling law found in the 21st Century Cures Act.  This meets the test that all regulation must meet in being able to establish its ties back to the supporting legislation, but unfortunately doesn't make it very easy to understand.

I think my comments on this regulation are going to be an attempt to reinterpret it based on rights and responsibilities that appear based on the intent of the legislation.  But this is an area where I think I'm going to need to get some expert assistance.  Because while I can probably figure out the right model, I'm not entirely clear on the constraints that current law might impose in interpretation.

    Keith



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