Some two dozen leading health systems – Cedar-Sinai, Johns Hopkins, Kaiser Permanente, NYU Langone and others – have pledged to take part in the Trusted Exchange Framework and Common Agreement, joining the nationwide interoperability effort through Epic's planned participation as a Qualified Health Information Network. We spoke recently with Matt Doyle, interoperability software development lead at Epic, about the EHR giant's work on TEFCA, as well as its efforts with Carquality and other data exchange efforts as it works to build out a wider information sharing ecosystem for its 250 million patients. Like what you hear? Subscribe to the podcast on Apple Podcasts, Spotify or Google Play! Talking points: Why Epic applied as QHIN, and what the process was like How it's working with 24 of the biggest and most respective health systems on the effort What it hopes to accomplish with TEFCA How that interoperability initiative complements others, such as Carequality Challen
With a cohort of health systems including Mayo Clinic, Kaiser, Stanford Health and others, its QHIN efforts are aimed at advancing information exchange at providers nationwide, says Matt Doyle, interoperability software development lead at Epic.