CommonWell to Carequality: A Demarcation Point for Interoperability
The shot heard round the world may have happened in 1775 Lexington, but the connection heard round the US happened just over a week ago.
It was announced at the ONC summit in August that an initial connection between CommonWell and Carequality had been established. However, this long-anticipated connection wasn’t generally available…until last week. Now the provider organizations connected to either CommonWell or Carequality can freely share patient records with little to no effort.
“Interoperability” of the Past
Vendors have been posturing around interoperability capabilities for many years, but the truth has never been particularly rosy. Historically, the only options most people had were to either connect to an HIE or create one-off, custom connections. Both methods involved manually building point-to-point interfaces that could cost large amounts of money and required ongoing maintenance.
As a result, some organizations with many financial resources and a lot of determination were able to establish the connections they needed. But by and large, patient-record sharing was spotty.
Epic was the only vendor to move past the traditional approach and create a mechanism allowing for the almost automatic exchange of data with other Epic organizations. This worked really well for sharing with Epic customers, but to exchange with other vendors, organizations had to resort to manually creating interfaces like everyone else. As a result, Epic-to-Epic data sharing was mostly dismissed by the other vendors but was a capability they did not match.
Enter CommonWell and Carequality
At HIMSS 2013, CommonWell Health Alliance was announced as the solution to interoperability. However, it was mostly seen by the provider community as a marketing ploy to combat the Epic-to-Epic data sharing.
A year or so later, Carequality was announced and was likewise dismissed by providers as a ploy to counter CommonWell. Few providers KLAS spoke with expected much to happen from these entities.
CommonWell and Carequality took different approaches, but both promised to create a vendor-neutral platform and enable nationwide patient record sharing. CommonWell was to create a single network for disparate EMR vendors. Carequality planned to be a framework that connected networks to each other.
It was not obvious which approach would work, so vendors chose sides—all except athenahealth and eClinicalWorks, who connected to both entities.
KLAS then watched provider sentiment around CommonWell and Carequality slowly change. In KLAS’ 2015 interoperability research, providers did not talk much about the entities. In 2016, the entities came up more often. In 2017, it became clear that providers were starting to think CommonWell and Carequality could make a difference.
Which Option Worked?
Both CommonWell and Carequality officially worked to move records from one EMR to another; there was no winner based on technical capabilities. The big difference came down to provider adoption.
A large number of organizations began to connect to CommonWell. However, they joined one at a time. Too often, the other important provider organizations in their geographic areas had not connected. So, while CommonWell did allow the exchange of data, for many providers, there was no one to exchange with.
Carequality would have faced the same issue, but Epic was able to get the vast majority of their large, health system customers to connect. For an organization who connected to Carequality and had a big Epic shop in the area, there was a very high chance of connecting with that Epic shop. This created instant, known value to the connection.
Now that CommonWell is connected to Carequaltiy, it means that this Epic data is available to almost anyone who wants to connect with little or no cost or effort.
Access to the Epic data is exactly what was talked about by the initial sites that tested the CommonWell connection to Carequality. Ironically enough, Epic’s intra-operability, which was initially dismissed, will likely be the catalyst that pulls widespread patient-record sharing forward.
I have talked a lot about Epic, but it would be a miss to not call out athenahealth. athenahealth has been successful in connecting almost their entire customer base and have connected to both CommonWell and Carequaltiy. Their customer’s may not have the same gravitational pull that Epic’s large customers do, but if there is an athenahealth site in your area, once you connect, it’s almost a guarantee that they will be accessible to you.
Who’s On Board?
All but two of the other major EMR vendors—athenahealth, Cerner, CPSI, eClinicalWorks, Epic, Greenway Health, MEDITECH, NextGen Healthcare, and Virence Health (formerly GE Healthcare)—have customers connecting. At this point, Allscripts and MEDHOST have yet to connect to CommonWell or Carequality. However, Allscripts has committed to connect and expects to do so next year.
While all of these vendors have connections to this national network, only athenahealth and Epic customers have connected en masse; each vendor has more than 90% of their customers connected. Cerner is next at around 35%. Many other vendors’ customer bases are just getting started.
Some organizations may wonder what connecting would require of them. KLAS is excited to help answer those questions in our upcoming Interoperability report to be published next week.
But the main thing organizations will need to do is simply make a decision. The sooner organizations jump on board, the more quickly the value of connecting will rise.
If your organization hasn’t yet done so, choose today to connect. If you or your leaders are skeptical of whether connecting will really help your providers and patients or worry about barriers to connecting, stay tuned for next week’s post that will address several common concerns.
We still have work to do to realize the full value of the CommonWell connection to Carequality. But that value will be significant, and it will help patients and providers throughout the US.