Timely news and topical multimedia discussion focused on Health Information Technology and its role in improving health care. This blog will be the successor to The REC Blog.
Wednesday, April 2, 2014
No ICD-10. Now what?
The bill just passed by the House and Senate doesn't delay the October 1st ICD-10 conversion implementation by a year. It delays it by at least a year. Should the GOP regain control of the Senate later this year, a lot could change with respect to health care reform. Probably none of it for the better. ICD-10 might be delayed for years.
Just this morning, SCOTUS ruled 5-4 (McCutcheon v. FEC) that aggregate limits on campaign contributions are unconstitutional. The liberal commentariat is all abuzz with hyperbolic End-of-Demcracy hand-wringing.
I'm not so sure. The Koch brothers and Sheldon Adelson et al have this far wasted hundreds of millions of dollars to little national avail. The Hated Kenyan Commie won re-election in an electoral mauling, recall?
Still, a fully GOP-dominated 2015-16 Congress could wreak considerable reform havoc (though they'll probably waste the two years impeaching the President and holding countless Star Chamber hearings on every conceivable tertiary topic. Issa-istan run amuck).
How vital is ICD-10 to beneficial healthcare reform? Significantly? Trivially? No impact? Negative impact? What do you think? Who are the principal near-term beneficiaries of ICD-10? Payors? The Feds? (Having a difficult time seeing how it could be patients or their clinicians.)
Not clear to me at this point.
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More to come...
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