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Great News: ‘Meaningful Use’ Rule Released Today!

| Jul 13, 2010

We’ve said it before and you know it’s true: health information technology is for better health outcomes, not just better technology. And the new regulations released by the Obama administration show that they get it.

I was thrilled to watch HHS Secretary Sebelius, who recently spoke at the National Partnership’s annual luncheon, make the announcement this morning at HHS. These new regulations will mean that those health providers who take federal health IT dollars will be held accountable for improving the care you receive – by using health IT in a meaningful way.

An end is finally in sight for the days when doctors have to sift through incomplete and incomprehensible hand-written medical records – when patients must tote test results from doctor to doctor – and when family caregivers spend endless time trying to coordinate medications and treatments for those who can’t do so for themselves.

And we say ‘good riddance.’ The regulations are strong, sensible, patient-centered – and just what the nation needs as we reform our health care system.

But let’s be clear: our work on the meaningful use of health IT isn’t done. As we move forward, we need to make sure the regulations are strengthened so providers who violate privacy laws are ineligible for federal IT dollars, and so providers are required to give all patients timely access to their health information.

So, for today, let’s celebrate. Today’s action helps put in place the foundation for a health care system that works for patients and families – and we will all benefit as private and secure electronic health records become the norm in the United States. And tomorrow, we forge ahead. Stay tuned…

About the Author

Christine Bechtel

Christine Bechtel

Christine Bechtel is the Vice President of the National Partnership for Women & Families, where she is responsible for the strategic direction and oversight of the organization's day to day operations and programs. This includes overseeing every aspect of the organization's groundbreaking and multi-faceted health policy work, managing projects funded by the nation's largest foundations, partnerships with key business consortiums, and leading broad-based consumer coalitions that address issues ranging from health IT to patient-centered care to access.

Bechtel was previously vice president of the eHealth Initiative (eHI), a Washington D.C.-based non- profit organization dedicated to improving the quality, safety and efficiency of health care through information and information technology. As vice president, Bechtel headed the organization’s membership, public policy and government relations work. In this role, she led numerous initiatives to achieve consensus across the multiple stakeholders in health care on how to accelerate the adoption and effective use of health IT in a way that is responsible, sustainable, and builds and maintains the public's trust.

Prior to joining eHI, Bechtel worked with American Health Quality Association where she helped Quality Improvement Organizations (QIOs) and professionals improve the quality of health care in communities across America, focusing on the ambulatory setting, health disparities, and effective use of health IT. She also served as senior research advisor at AARP where she conducted public opinion studies and advised AARP’s leadership on public attitudes surrounding national political issues including Medicare prescription drugs, generic drugs, Social Security and elections issues.

Bechtel’s experience also includes community-based quality improvement activities. She was director of community development for Louisiana's Medicare Quality Improvement Organization, Louisiana Health Care Review, where she was responsible for designing, implementing and overseeing innovative projects to improve health care quality for Medicare beneficiaries in Louisiana.

Bechtel served as a legislative associate for United States Senator Barbara A. Mikulski (D-MD), focusing on legislative issues ranging from women’s health and stem cell research to Medicare and Social Security. She holds a bachelor's degree in politics and public policy from Goucher College in Baltimore, Maryland and a master's degree in political management from George Washington University in Washington, D.C.

Bechtel and her husband Peter live in Gaithersburg, Md.