Health Information Technology Extension Program, 4350-4351 [2011-1447]
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4350
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 16 / Tuesday, January 25, 2011 / Notices
Antitrust Improvements Act of 1976,
Public Law 94–435, 90 Stat. 1390 (‘‘the
Act’’), requires all persons
contemplating certain mergers or
acquisitions, which meet or exceed the
jurisdictional thresholds in the Act, to
file notification with the Commission
and the Assistant Attorney General and
to wait a designated period of time
before consummating such transactions.
Section 7A(a)(2) requires the Federal
Trade Commission to revise those
thresholds annually, based on the
change in gross national product, in
accordance with Section 8(a)(5). The
new thresholds, which take effect 30
days after publication in the Federal
Register, are as follows:
Subsection of 7A
Original threshold
7A(a)(2)(A) .....................................................................................................................
7A(a)(2)(B)(i) ..................................................................................................................
7A(a)(2)(B)(i) ..................................................................................................................
7A(a)(2)(B)(ii)(i) ..............................................................................................................
7A(a)(2)(B)(ii)(i) ..............................................................................................................
7A(a)(2)(B)(ii)(II) .............................................................................................................
7A(a)(2)(B)(ii)(II) .............................................................................................................
7A(a)(2)(B)(ii)(III) ............................................................................................................
7A(a)(2)(B)(ii)(III) ............................................................................................................
Section 7A note: Assessment and Collection of Filing Fees 1 (3)(b)(1) ........................
Section 7A note: Assessment and Collection of Filing Fees (3)(b)(2) ..........................
Section 7A note: Assessment and Collection of Filing Fees (3)(b)(2) ..........................
Section 7A note: Assessment and Collection of Filing Fees (3)(b)(3) ..........................
$200 million ........................
$50 million ..........................
$200 million ........................
$10 million ..........................
$100 million ........................
$10 million ..........................
$100 million ........................
$100 million ........................
$10 million ..........................
$100 million ........................
$100 million ........................
$500 million ........................
$500 million ........................
1 Public
Original threshold
$10 million .................
$50 million .................
$100 million ...............
$110 million ...............
$200 million ...............
$500 million ...............
$1 billion ....................
Adjusted threshold
$13.2 million
$66.0 million
$131.9 million
$145.1 million
$263.8 million
$659.5 million
$1,319.0 million
Effective Date: February 24,
B.
Michael Verne, Bureau of Competition,
Premerger Notification Office, (202)
326–3100.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT:
Authority: 16 U.S.C. 7A.
By direction of the Commission.
Donald S. Clark,
Secretary.
[FR Doc. 2011–1501 Filed 1–24–11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 6750–01–P
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND
HUMAN SERVICES
Health Information Technology
Extension Program
Public Notice.
This notice announces
changes to the Health Information
Technology Extension Program, which
assists providers seeking to adopt and
SUMMARY:
VerDate Mar<15>2010
18:40 Jan 24, 2011
Jkt 223001
become meaningful users of health
information technology, as authorized
under section 3012(c) of the Public
Health Service Act, as added by the
American Recovery and Reinvestment
Act of 2009 (Pub. L. 111–5) (ARRA).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The
Office of the National Coordinator for
Health Information Technology, 200
Independence Ave, SW., Suite 729D,
Washington, DC 20201, Phone 202–690–
7151, E-mail: onc.request@hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
2011.
ACTION:
$263.8 million.
$66.0 million.
$263.8 million.
$13.2 million.
$131.9 million.
$13.2 million.
$131.9 million.
$131.9 million.
$13.2 million.
$131.9 million.
$131.9 million.
$659.5 million.
$659.5 million.
Law 106–553, Sec. 630(b) amended Sec. 18a note.
Any reference to these thresholds and
related thresholds and limitation values
in the HSR rules (16 CFR Parts 801–803)
and the Antitrust Improvements Act
Notification and Report Form and its
Instructions will also be adjusted, where
indicated by the term ‘‘(as adjusted),’’ as
follows:
DATES:
Adjusted threshold
On February 17, 2009, the President
signed the American Recovery and
Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA). Title
XIII of Division A and Title IV of
Division B of ARRA, together cited as
the Health Information Technology for
Economic and Clinical Health Act
(HITECH Act), include provisions to
promote meaningful use of health
information technology to improve the
quality and value of American health
care. The HITECH Act also established
the Office of the National Coordinator
for Health Information Technology
(ONC) within the U.S. Department of
Health and Human Services (HHS) as
the principal Federal entity responsible
for coordinating the effort to implement
a nationwide health information
technology (health IT) infrastructure
that allows for the use and exchange of
electronic health information in
electronic format.
Subtitles A and B of Title IV in
Division B of ARRA authorize incentive
payments for eligible Medicare and
Medicaid providers’ adoption and
meaningful use of certified electronic
health record (EHR) technology. In
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Fmt 4703
Sfmt 4703
2015, Medicare eligible providers are
expected to have adopted and be
actively utilizing certified EHR
technology in compliance with the
‘‘meaningful use’’ definition or they will
be subject to payment adjustments
under Medicare (per sections 4101(b)
and 4102(b) of ARRA). The detailed
criteria to qualify for meaningful use
incentive payments were established by
the Secretary of HHS (hereafter referred
to as the Secretary) through the formal
notice-and-comment rulemaking
process. For access to the most current
publicly available information about
meaningful use, please visit the
Meaningful Use section of the ONC
programmatic Web site (https://
healthit.hhs.gov/portal/server.pt/
community/healthit_hhs_gov__
meaningful_use_announcement/2996)
and https://www.cms.gov/
EHRIncentivePrograms/.
Providers seeking to meaningfully use
certified EHR technology face a variety
of challenging tasks. Those tasks
include assessing needs, selecting and
negotiating with a system vendor or
reseller, implementing project
management, and instituting workflow
changes to improve clinical
performance and ultimately, outcomes.
Past experience has shown that robust
local technical assistance can result in
effective implementation of EHRs and
quality improvement throughout a
defined geographic area.
Section 3012 of the Public Health
Service Act (PHSA), as added by ARRA
(see Appendix A), authorized the
establishment of the Health Information
Technology Extension Program
(Extension Program). By statute, the
Extension Program is to include a
national Health Information Technology
E:\FR\FM\25JAN1.SGM
25JAN1
4351
mstockstill on DSKH9S0YB1PROD with NOTICES
Federal Register / Vol. 76, No. 16 / Tuesday, January 25, 2011 / Notices
Research Center (HITRC), and grant
funding toward the creation and
operation of Regional Extension Centers
(Regional Centers).
The purpose of the Regional Centers
is to furnish assistance (defined as
education, outreach, and technical
assistance) to help providers in their
geographic service areas select,
successfully implement, and
meaningfully use certified EHR
technology to improve the quality and
value of health care. Regional Centers
will also help providers achieve,
through appropriate available
infrastructures, exchange of health
information in compliance with
applicable statutory and regulatory
requirements, and patient preferences.
In doing this work, Regional Centers
will also seek to ensure consistency
with any applicable State HIE plan(s)
that are developed under the
cooperative agreements issued by ONC
pursuant to section 3013 of the PHSA.
Pursuant to requirements of section
3012(c)(5) of the PHSA, Regional
Centers must give priority to providers
that are primary-care providers
(physicians and/or other health care
professionals with prescriptive
privileges, such as physician assistants
and nurse practitioners) in any of the
following settings:
• Individual and small group
practices (ten or fewer professionals
with prescriptive privileges) primarily
focused on primary care;
• Public and Critical Access
Hospitals;
• Community Health Centers and
Rural Health Clinics; and
• Other settings that predominantly
serve uninsured, underinsured, and
medically underserved populations.
A practice otherwise meeting the
definition of individual or small-group
physician practice, above, may
participate in shared-services and/or
group purchasing agreements, and/or
reciprocal agreements for patient
coverage, with other physician practices
without affecting its status as individual
or small-group practice for purposes of
the Regional Centers.
In any given Regional Center’s service
area, some priority primary-care
providers (as described above) may have
already acquired and/or implemented
EHR technology. Such providers remain
priority providers, though the technical
assistance required is anticipated to be
focused on movement from having an
EHR to achieving all aspects of
meaningful use of EHR technology,
including but not necessarily limited to
electronic exchange of health
information and reporting of quality
measures using the EHR.
VerDate Mar<15>2010
19:39 Jan 24, 2011
Jkt 223001
The ultimate measure of a Regional
Center’s effectiveness will be whether it
has assisted providers in becoming
meaningful users of certified EHR
technology.
Cooperative agreement awards were
made pursuant to an open competition
to establish 62 Regional Centers. The
awards were made on a rolling basis.
The first set of 32 Regional Center
awards was made in February 2010, the
second set of 28 awards was made in
April 2010, and the final 2 awards were
made in September 2010.
While section 3012(c)(5) of the PHSA
generally limited Federal funding for
Regional Centers to 50% of their capital
and annual operating and maintenance
funds, it included a provision allowing
for different cost sharing in instances in
which the prescribed cost sharing
ceiling would ‘‘render this cost-sharing
requirement detrimental to the
program.’’ The Secretary made this
finding, and, as a result, the original
cooperative agreement award was
comprised of a four-year project period,
consisting of two two-year budget
periods. The first budget period (years 1
and 2) had a 90/10 cost share
requirement and the second budget
period (years 3 and 4) had a 10/90 cost
share requirement. For the first budget
period the grantee was responsible for
contributing 1 dollar for every 9 Federal
dollars. For the second budget period,
the grantee was responsible for
contributing 9 dollars for every 1 dollar
of Federal funds.
Year
1
2
3
4
........................
........................
........................
........................
Federal
amount of
costs
(percent)
90
90
90
90
Recipient
amount of
costs
(percent)
10
10
10
10
It is expected that the Regional
Centers will generate resources to
support cost sharing in ways that
demonstrate hospital, provider, and
community commitment to the project
and its goals of supporting adoption and
meaningful use of health IT. Such
sources of funding to support the
project’s cost share obligation under the
cooperative agreement could include
per-provider participation fees. This
statement does not preclude recipients
using other legal sources of cost sharing
contributions as governed by 45 CFR
part 74. All of the funds for cooperative
agreement should be spent during the
base award’s budget period (Years 1, 2,
3, and 4), including the cost sharing
requirement described above.
Fees and other funds generated by the
project are considered program income
under 45 CFR Part 74. Program income
generated by the recipient must be
retained by the recipient and first used
to finance the non-Federal share of the
project. To support sustainability, ONC
places no limits on the accrual of
program income. After the Federal cost
sharing requirement is met, program
income generated using Federal funds,
including fees for services, must be
II. Description of Changes
added to funds committed to the project
by the Federal government and used to
In overseeing the ongoing Extension
further eligible project or program
Program, the Secretary found that the
objectives.
established cost sharing requirements
(90/10 in years one and two, and 10/90
As stated in the original Funding
in years three and four) are continuing
Opportunity Announcement (FOA), a
to ‘‘render [the] cost-sharing requirement positive biennial evaluation will be
detrimental to the program’’ due to
required for grantees to continue work
national economic conditions To
in years 3 and 4 of the grant; this
alleviate these concerns, the Secretary
requirement is unchanged by the
will be seeking bi-lateral modifications
December 2010 waiver. The anticipated
to the grants to alter the initial timeline
bi-lateral modifications to the original
and cost-sharing requirements in the
grants will include achievement of a
Regional Center grants. Through these
positive biennial evaluation as a term
modifications, the timeline would be
and condition of the grant. The
lengthened in the first budget period
previously approved goals, objectives,
from two years to four years, and the
activities and timelines of the Regional
cost-sharing requirement would reflect a Center program remain unchanged.
90/10 Federal/grantee cost share for all
David Blumenthal,
four years. Modifications will be
effectuated through the execution of
National Coordinator for Health Information
Technology.
revised Notice of Grant Awards (NGA).
[FR Doc. 2011–1447 Filed 1–24–11; 8:45 am]
If modified, the cost share
BILLING CODE 4150–45–P
requirements for the cooperative
agreement will be as follows:
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E:\FR\FM\25JAN1.SGM
25JAN1
Agencies
[Federal Register Volume 76, Number 16 (Tuesday, January 25, 2011)]
[Notices]
[Pages 4350-4351]
From the Federal Register Online via the Government Printing Office [www.gpo.gov]
[FR Doc No: 2011-1447]
=======================================================================
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
DEPARTMENT OF HEALTH AND HUMAN SERVICES
Health Information Technology Extension Program
ACTION: Public Notice.
-----------------------------------------------------------------------
SUMMARY: This notice announces changes to the Health Information
Technology Extension Program, which assists providers seeking to adopt
and become meaningful users of health information technology, as
authorized under section 3012(c) of the Public Health Service Act, as
added by the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (Pub. L.
111-5) (ARRA).
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT: The Office of the National Coordinator
for Health Information Technology, 200 Independence Ave, SW., Suite
729D, Washington, DC 20201, Phone 202-690-7151, E-mail:
onc.request@hhs.gov.
SUPPLEMENTARY INFORMATION:
I. Background
On February 17, 2009, the President signed the American Recovery
and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (ARRA). Title XIII of Division A and Title
IV of Division B of ARRA, together cited as the Health Information
Technology for Economic and Clinical Health Act (HITECH Act), include
provisions to promote meaningful use of health information technology
to improve the quality and value of American health care. The HITECH
Act also established the Office of the National Coordinator for Health
Information Technology (ONC) within the U.S. Department of Health and
Human Services (HHS) as the principal Federal entity responsible for
coordinating the effort to implement a nationwide health information
technology (health IT) infrastructure that allows for the use and
exchange of electronic health information in electronic format.
Subtitles A and B of Title IV in Division B of ARRA authorize
incentive payments for eligible Medicare and Medicaid providers'
adoption and meaningful use of certified electronic health record (EHR)
technology. In 2015, Medicare eligible providers are expected to have
adopted and be actively utilizing certified EHR technology in
compliance with the ``meaningful use'' definition or they will be
subject to payment adjustments under Medicare (per sections 4101(b) and
4102(b) of ARRA). The detailed criteria to qualify for meaningful use
incentive payments were established by the Secretary of HHS (hereafter
referred to as the Secretary) through the formal notice-and-comment
rulemaking process. For access to the most current publicly available
information about meaningful use, please visit the Meaningful Use
section of the ONC programmatic Web site (https://healthit.hhs.gov/portal/server.pt/community/healthit_hhs_gov__meaningful_use_announcement/2996) and https://www.cms.gov/EHRIncentivePrograms/.
Providers seeking to meaningfully use certified EHR technology face
a variety of challenging tasks. Those tasks include assessing needs,
selecting and negotiating with a system vendor or reseller,
implementing project management, and instituting workflow changes to
improve clinical performance and ultimately, outcomes. Past experience
has shown that robust local technical assistance can result in
effective implementation of EHRs and quality improvement throughout a
defined geographic area.
Section 3012 of the Public Health Service Act (PHSA), as added by
ARRA (see Appendix A), authorized the establishment of the Health
Information Technology Extension Program (Extension Program). By
statute, the Extension Program is to include a national Health
Information Technology
[[Page 4351]]
Research Center (HITRC), and grant funding toward the creation and
operation of Regional Extension Centers (Regional Centers).
The purpose of the Regional Centers is to furnish assistance
(defined as education, outreach, and technical assistance) to help
providers in their geographic service areas select, successfully
implement, and meaningfully use certified EHR technology to improve the
quality and value of health care. Regional Centers will also help
providers achieve, through appropriate available infrastructures,
exchange of health information in compliance with applicable statutory
and regulatory requirements, and patient preferences. In doing this
work, Regional Centers will also seek to ensure consistency with any
applicable State HIE plan(s) that are developed under the cooperative
agreements issued by ONC pursuant to section 3013 of the PHSA.
Pursuant to requirements of section 3012(c)(5) of the PHSA,
Regional Centers must give priority to providers that are primary-care
providers (physicians and/or other health care professionals with
prescriptive privileges, such as physician assistants and nurse
practitioners) in any of the following settings:
Individual and small group practices (ten or fewer
professionals with prescriptive privileges) primarily focused on
primary care;
Public and Critical Access Hospitals;
Community Health Centers and Rural Health Clinics; and
Other settings that predominantly serve uninsured,
underinsured, and medically underserved populations.
A practice otherwise meeting the definition of individual or small-
group physician practice, above, may participate in shared-services
and/or group purchasing agreements, and/or reciprocal agreements for
patient coverage, with other physician practices without affecting its
status as individual or small-group practice for purposes of the
Regional Centers.
In any given Regional Center's service area, some priority primary-
care providers (as described above) may have already acquired and/or
implemented EHR technology. Such providers remain priority providers,
though the technical assistance required is anticipated to be focused
on movement from having an EHR to achieving all aspects of meaningful
use of EHR technology, including but not necessarily limited to
electronic exchange of health information and reporting of quality
measures using the EHR.
The ultimate measure of a Regional Center's effectiveness will be
whether it has assisted providers in becoming meaningful users of
certified EHR technology.
Cooperative agreement awards were made pursuant to an open
competition to establish 62 Regional Centers. The awards were made on a
rolling basis. The first set of 32 Regional Center awards was made in
February 2010, the second set of 28 awards was made in April 2010, and
the final 2 awards were made in September 2010.
While section 3012(c)(5) of the PHSA generally limited Federal
funding for Regional Centers to 50% of their capital and annual
operating and maintenance funds, it included a provision allowing for
different cost sharing in instances in which the prescribed cost
sharing ceiling would ``render this cost-sharing requirement
detrimental to the program.'' The Secretary made this finding, and, as
a result, the original cooperative agreement award was comprised of a
four-year project period, consisting of two two-year budget periods.
The first budget period (years 1 and 2) had a 90/10 cost share
requirement and the second budget period (years 3 and 4) had a 10/90
cost share requirement. For the first budget period the grantee was
responsible for contributing 1 dollar for every 9 Federal dollars. For
the second budget period, the grantee was responsible for contributing
9 dollars for every 1 dollar of Federal funds.
II. Description of Changes
In overseeing the ongoing Extension Program, the Secretary found
that the established cost sharing requirements (90/10 in years one and
two, and 10/90 in years three and four) are continuing to ``render
[the] cost-sharing requirement detrimental to the program'' due to
national economic conditions To alleviate these concerns, the Secretary
will be seeking bi-lateral modifications to the grants to alter the
initial timeline and cost-sharing requirements in the Regional Center
grants. Through these modifications, the timeline would be lengthened
in the first budget period from two years to four years, and the cost-
sharing requirement would reflect a 90/10 Federal/grantee cost share
for all four years. Modifications will be effectuated through the
execution of revised Notice of Grant Awards (NGA).
If modified, the cost share requirements for the cooperative
agreement will be as follows:
------------------------------------------------------------------------
Federal Recipient
amount of amount of
Year costs costs
(percent) (percent)
------------------------------------------------------------------------
1............................................. 90 10
2............................................. 90 10
3............................................. 90 10
4............................................. 90 10
------------------------------------------------------------------------
It is expected that the Regional Centers will generate resources to
support cost sharing in ways that demonstrate hospital, provider, and
community commitment to the project and its goals of supporting
adoption and meaningful use of health IT. Such sources of funding to
support the project's cost share obligation under the cooperative
agreement could include per-provider participation fees. This statement
does not preclude recipients using other legal sources of cost sharing
contributions as governed by 45 CFR part 74. All of the funds for
cooperative agreement should be spent during the base award's budget
period (Years 1, 2, 3, and 4), including the cost sharing requirement
described above.
Fees and other funds generated by the project are considered
program income under 45 CFR Part 74. Program income generated by the
recipient must be retained by the recipient and first used to finance
the non-Federal share of the project. To support sustainability, ONC
places no limits on the accrual of program income. After the Federal
cost sharing requirement is met, program income generated using Federal
funds, including fees for services, must be added to funds committed to
the project by the Federal government and used to further eligible
project or program objectives.
As stated in the original Funding Opportunity Announcement (FOA), a
positive biennial evaluation will be required for grantees to continue
work in years 3 and 4 of the grant; this requirement is unchanged by
the December 2010 waiver. The anticipated bi-lateral modifications to
the original grants will include achievement of a positive biennial
evaluation as a term and condition of the grant. The previously
approved goals, objectives, activities and timelines of the Regional
Center program remain unchanged.
David Blumenthal,
National Coordinator for Health Information Technology.
[FR Doc. 2011-1447 Filed 1-24-11; 8:45 am]
BILLING CODE 4150-45-P