OpenEMR Achieves Complete Meaningful Use Certification with Release 5.0

bradymiller wrote on Thursday, March 02, 2017:

OpenEMR Achieves Complete Meaningful Use Certification with Release 5.0 - New features and modernization make this OpenEMR release 'Groundbreaking’

OpenEMR, the most popular open source electronic health records (EHR) and medical practice management solution, has announced today that OpenEMR version 5.0 has achieved Complete ONC certification, through Infogard. This certification is vital for medical practices in the U.S. to comply with MACRA and participate in Medicare’s Quality Payment Program.

The Complete Meaningful Use Certification was the result of a community effort that spanned several years, involving over $200,000 in effort and code contributions. The number of enhancements brought into OpenEMR was expansive and includes standardization of patient medical information, coordination of care, patient privacy, patient engagement, security, public health and automated calculations of metrics and clinical quality measures. The list of direct contributors to this effort included ZH Healthcare, Ensoftek, Visolve, MI-Squared, Brady Miller MD, EMR Direct, Jan Jajalla, Sunset Systems, Columbia University Certification of Professional Achievement in Health IT, Jeff Guillory NP, Ray Magauran MD, and John Tenny MD, among others.

The OpenEMR 5.0 release boasts many features unrelated to meaningful use. Modernization was the theme, which includes a new logo and website, www.open-emr.org. A major enhancement in this release is the sleek user interface, geared towards efficient workflow. “I have used OpenEMR for seven years. The new user interface makes the life of providers simpler and easier, with fast retrieval and entering of patient information in a single screen, while supporting a robust feature set,” said OpenEMR user Dr. Arnab Naha MBBS.

Another enhancement is a feature-packed Ophthalmology/Optometry module, designed and built by Ray Magauran MD, a practicing Ophthalmologist. “As ophthalmologists, we need a product that matches our workflows, doesn’t slow us down or cost an arm and a leg. My clinic is now paperless. We have moved into the cloud,” said OpenEMR volunteer developer, Ray Magauran MD.

This release brings enhancements in the patient tracker, reporting, scheduling, billing, security, and form validation modules. Internationalization of OpenEMR was enhanced by adding support for right to left languages to the already included 33 languages. Enterprise use of OpenEMR was strengthened by upgrading the MySQL database engine to InnoDB. Accessibility for OpenEMR developers was improved by migrating the codebase repository from Sourceforge to Github, which allows for efficient, coordinated development.

The OpenEMR community remains committed to continued support and improvement of the OpenEMR product. “The last year has been a golden age for OpenEMR with increasing active development and a broadening community of developers, users, volunteers, professionals, and OpenEMR champions. As OpenEMR continues to improve and needs for OpenEMR increases, I expect OpenEMR’s successes to continue into the future,” said OpenEMR project co-administrator Brady Miller MD.

About OpenEMR
OpenEMR was originally released as an open source project in 2002 and is maintained and supported by a vibrant community of volunteers and professionals. OpenEMR is the most popular open source electronic health records and medical practice management solution. OpenEMR is downloaded more than 7,000 times per month and it has been estimated that OpenEMR serves more than 100,000 medical providers and up to 200 million patients across the globe. For more information, visit: http://www.open-emr.org.

About OEMR
OEMR is a nonprofit organization, founded in 2010 to support the OpenEMR project with a mission to ensure that all people, regardless of race, socioeconomic status or geographic location, have access to high-quality medical care through the donation of free, open source medical software and service relating to that software. The OEMR organization is the legal entity that maintains ONC certification for OpenEMR. For more information, visit: http://www.oemr.org.

See original article on PRNewswire: http://www.prnewswire.com/news-releases/openemr-achieves-complete-meaningful-use-certification-with-release-50-300415752.html

sunsetsystems wrote on Tuesday, March 07, 2017:

Hi Brady, could you comment on the extent to which this release code could be modified and still qualify as certified? If necessary, is there a straightforward path for “updating” the certification of changed code? Thanks!

Rod

bradymiller wrote on Tuesday, March 07, 2017:

Hi Rod,
Do you mean customizing of the code or ongoing official code development?
For official code development, OEMR fills out quarterly attestation regarding code changes. And we are ensuring we don’t step on the MU2 functionality.
If there are large changes that require recertify(for example, if changed the mechanism to build the CCDA docs, since it has been explicitly documented which tool is used to do that), would need to do full testing of the pertinent elements.
-brady

sunsetsystems wrote on Tuesday, March 07, 2017:

Ideally official, since we want to get the changes into the project. Quite a lot has been piling up though. Would they go into the master branch, or are we talking rel-500?

Rod

bradymiller wrote on Tuesday, March 07, 2017:

Hi Rod,
Lets just continue to follow standard way of bringing them into master
(note this release will be 5.0.1 and will be covered by MU2). I’ll flag
stuff if they step on MU2 during the code reviews. I’m also bringing
pertinent stuff over to rel-500 (focusing more on bug fixes than new
features, though).
-brady

On Tue, Mar 7, 2017 at 12:37 PM, Rod Roark sunsetsystems@users.sf.net
wrote:

Ideally official, since we want to get the changes into the project. Quite
a lot has been piling up though. Would they go into the master branch, or
are we talking rel-500?

Rod

OpenEMR Achieves Complete Meaningful Use Certification with Release 5.0
https://sourceforge.net/p/openemr/discussion/202504/thread/e438210f/?limit=25#2003

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