Author: Carl Kunkleman
Senior Vice President and Co-Founder
ClearDATA
Hospitals racing to meet Meaningful Use Stage 2 requirements are feeling the financial pinch of having to make large IT investments. In addition to implementing an EMR system, they’ve had to expand their underlying IT infrastructure, adding servers, storage area networks (SANs), tape backup systems and more. In Stage 2, all hospitals are required to “Protect electronic health information created or maintained by the Certified EHR Technology.” (Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, August 2012). Protected health information (PHI) involves HIPAA-compliant storage, data privacy and security, backup and disaster recovery.
Because infrastructure that’s purchased to help hospitals “attest” to Meaningful Use, the federal government allows your organization include these infrastructure expenses, when attesting thereby allowing you to recoup some or all of your investment. The key for any organization will be to make sure you are reimbursed the full amount you are eligible for.
This article explains how to do that. First it outlines five areas where your organization can transition to the cloud—and why this move makes financial sense, with or without Meaningful Use. Then it explains how moving to the cloud helps you maximize Meaningful Use reimbursement.
Moving to the cloud doesn’t have to mean transitioning your entire infrastructure all at once (though that is certainly possible). The following are five areas where your organization can make the transition, saving time and money by doing so:
The Meaningful Use-driven digitization process is ramping up the need for healthcare organizations to invest considerable resources dealing with the five categories outlined above. Fortunately, you can in many cases assign these costs to Meaningful Use and receive reimbursement from the government.
But not all costs are created equal. The federal government reimburses capital and operational expenditures differently under Meaningful Use. Specifically, they will only reimburse a percentage of your capital expenditures, because the value of capital equipment depreciates. If you spend $50,000 on new hardware, you won’t be reimbursed for the purchase price. Rather, the government will calculate your reimbursement based on normal depreciation of that hardware over its lifespan.
In contrast, the government will reimburse up to 100 percent of operational expenditures (up to the total amount you are eligible to receive). Money spent for cloud services is categorized as an operational expense—making any investment for cloud-computing in the five areas described reimbursable.
The next time you consider spending your capital budget on IT infrastructure, consider the possibility of moving to the cloud. Not only will you save money on equipment, maintenance and labor, you’ll also get the maximum value out of your efforts to achieve Meaningful Use.