HHS Taps Fenway Health as Pilot Site for Precision Medicine Project

HHS Taps Fenway Health as Pilot Site for Advancing Standards for Precision Medicine Project

What You Should Know:

– Fenway
Health has been selected as the pilot site to participate in the Advancing
Standards for Precision Medicine (ASPM) project.

– The ASPM project
is focused on how healthcare providers can systematically identify the
socio-economic factors that may impact the health of patients in order to
provide more individualized care that reflects patients’ needs. 


Fenway Health, a
Boston, MA-based Federally Qualified Community Health Center (FQCHC) dedicated
to making enhancing the wellbeing of the LGBTQIA+ community, people living with
HIV/AIDS and the broader population has been selected as the pilot site to participate
in the Advancing
Standards for Precision Medicine (ASPM) project
. Conducted by the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Service’s Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology (ONC), in partnership with Audacious
Inquiry
, the University of Washington’s Clinical Informatics Research Group
and athenahealth, the project aims to develop standards for the
collection of social determinants of health data (unmet needs in areas such as income, educational attainment, employment
status, food security, housing, and more). 

Advancing Standards for Precision Medicine Background

Data sharing is critical to realizing the future of
precision medicine. Launched in 2018, the Advancing Standards for Precision
Medicine (ASPM) project works to further the development and testing of
standards for new and diverse types of health data. The ultimate goal is to
make health data easier to share, curate, aggregate, and synthesize.

– ASPM is focusing on standards in two areas:

– Mobile health, sensor, and wearable data

Social determinants of health (SDOH) data

The project will leverage digital tools and questionnaires
to advance the standardized collection of data. Social determinants of health
play a major role in individual health outcomes. “athenahealth’s
partnerships with Fenway health and others ground us to the realities and
challenges of healthcare today to improve health outcomes” said Kedar
Ganta, athenahealth’s Product Leader for Interoperability Strategy.
“Transforming Patient Care by prioritizing the collection and sharing of
interoperable SDOH data will better identify patient needs and create impact
across the communities”

In fact, patients’ unmet social needs have been found to
account for up to 40 percent of individual health outcomes. Increasingly,
health care organizations are focused on addressing these needs to help improve
treatment and care in a way that addresses the whole patient.

EHR Data Collection Approach

Fenway Health will employ their current web-based assessment
tool, ePRO, which was developed by the University of Washington’s Clinical
Informatics Research Group (CIRG), as a prototype for testing and transmitting
the systematic capture of SDOH data, as well as ASPM’s proposed standards and
implementation guides as part of their effort. That data will then be sent to
athenahealth, Fenway Health’s electronic health record (EHR) vendor, and be
incorporated into the patient’s health record in a standardized format.

“Standardizing SDOH data and incorporating that information into the EHR along with other patient-reported outcomes, allows health care providers to better understand the context in which their patients live and what they experience, and helps providers offer more personalized and relevant care”, said Dr. Bill Lober, Professor at the University of Washington, and director of CIRG.

 Pilot Project Timeline

The ASPM project is set to last through the Fall of 2020 and
will culminate in an evaluation report to be shared with ONC and the National
Institute of Health (NIH). The evaluation will be used to identify challenges
in data collection and sharing between health care providers and to develop
solutions that will lead to better implementation of collection initiatives and
protocols in the future.

The project hopes to expand the types of data that can be
integrated into EHRs
to create a more complete picture of the patient that would reflect the
patient’s practical reality and the issues that may impact their health in the
future. Ultimately, the project’s goal is to give health care providers the
data and tools needed to provide patients with individualized treatment and to
help them achieve better outcomes.