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HIT Adoption Among California Dentists

What's the level of interest among California dentists in adopting health information technology, such as electronic dental health records, and how many are already making use of such systems? This snapshot of survey data provides some answers.

Diabetic Retinopathy: Call for Applications

This project will support clinics in providing remote diabetic retinopathy screenings to patients by funding retinal cameras, software, and expert consultation from the UCB School of Optometry. Applications are being accepted now through October 2010.

Revisiting the HITECH Act, One Year Later

A new report examines the progress implementing the U.S. government's multi-billion-dollar effort to jump-start adoption of information technology tools in the health care industry. Recommendations for further action by the White House and Congress are included.

Physician Practices

Monday, June 29, 2009

Bill Would Establish Health IT Loan Program for Small Practices

More details have emerged about the Small Business Health IT Financing Act (HR 3014), which would establish a loan program for health care providers who want to invest in health IT systems, Healthcare IT News reports.

House Small Business Regulations and Healthcare Subcommittee Chair Kathy Dahlkemper (D-Pa.) introduced the bill last week during a subcommittee hearing on health IT adoption among small physician practices (Merrill, Healthcare IT News, 6/26).

Legislation Details

The bill would allocate $10 billion in Small Business Administration loans to help individual health care providers and small practices purchase health IT tools that support the "meaningful use" requirements of the economic stimulus law.

Under the stimulus package, physicians who demonstrate meaningful use of electronic health records could qualify for increased federal incentive payments.

The bill would allow a single provider to receive a maximum loan of $350,000 and a small practice to receive a maximum loan of $2 million.

All applicants also must qualify as small businesses under the Small Business Act.

Health care providers could use the loans to purchase and install technology that:

  • Boosts evidence-based decision support;
  • Empowers consumers or patients;
  • Enhances continuity of care; or
  • Improves quality measurement reporting (Goedert, Health Data Management, 6/26).

Dahlkemper said, "Ultimately, small and solo health practitioners are small businesses. Similar to small businesses everywhere, one of their biggest challenges is accessing affordable capital."

She added that providing loans for small practices to invest in electronic health records and other health IT tools will help reduce costs in the broader health care system (Healthcare IT News, 6/26).

The bill has been referred to the House Committee on Small Business (Health Data Management, 6/26).



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