McKesson’s Horizon Clinicals®, a software suite used by clinicians, patients, and healthcare executives to promote high-quality, safe care, has received complete EHR certification—deeming the software capable of enabling providers to meet the Stage 1 meaningful use measures required to qualify for funding under the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act (ARRA). Tested and certified under the Drummond Group’s Electronic Health Records Office of the National Coordinator Authorized Testing and Certification Body (ONC-ATCB) program, the EHR software is 2011/2012 compliant in accordance with the criteria adopted by the Secretary of Health and Human Services.

“Our teams have worked diligently to deliver the robust EHR our customers need to demonstrate meaningful use—from care standardization and interoperability to privacy and security updates to the content and analytics capabilities needed to enable accurate reporting as a byproduct of care,” said Jeremy Chandler, senior VP, customer success for McKesson Provider Technologies. “Above and beyond this, we have focused on adoption and the need for a clinician-friendly workflow, which isn’t a requirement of certification but is certainly important in garnering clinician adoption of technology. We continue to partner with our customers to ensure that our solution meets the real-world needs of caregivers.”

Drummond Group’s ONC-ATCB 2011/2012 certification program tests and certifies that EHRs meet the meaningful use criteria for either eligible provider or hospital technology. In turn, healthcare providers using the EHR systems of certified vendors are qualified to receive federal stimulus monies upon demonstrating meaningful use of the technology—a key component of the federal government’s push to improve clinical care delivery through the adoption and effective use of EHRs by US healthcare providers.

“The need for EHRs in the US healthcare system has been acknowledged for many years. Drummond Group is proud to work with leading healthcare vendors and help them offer certified technologies to health providers across the country. With more than 10 years of software testing experience carried out in several industries and with sophisticated software systems, we are confident in our ability to offer an effective and cost-efficient testing process to the healthcare industry,” says Rik Drummond, CEO of Drummond Group. “The snowball effect could mean great things for clinical care in our country. We can help IT vendors certify their EHR systems—vendors can then help providers implement the EHR solutions to achieve meaningful use and receive incentive funds—and ultimately providers can leverage the systems to improve clinical care across the nation.”

Source: McKesson Provider Technologies