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ehr onc final certification - Department of Health Care Services

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Response. At the present time, we believe that the definition <strong>of</strong> Certified EHR<br />

Technology already includes some <strong>of</strong> the flexibility these commenters request. We<br />

permit, for example, a Complete EHR designed for an ambulatory setting and a Complete<br />

EHR designed for an inpatient setting both to meet the definition <strong>of</strong> Certified EHR<br />

Technology, even though each is compliant with a slightly different set <strong>of</strong> applicable<br />

<strong>certification</strong> criteria. In that regard, we believe we have integrated a balanced and<br />

appropriate amount <strong>of</strong> flexibility into the definition <strong>of</strong> Certified EHR Technology, which<br />

will also allow us to make additional refinements over time. We believe that it is<br />

possible based on industry need for us to specify in a future rulemaking sets <strong>of</strong> applicable<br />

<strong>certification</strong> criteria for Complete EHRs and EHR Modules designed for particular<br />

clinical settings.<br />

9. Definition <strong>of</strong> Human Readable Format<br />

Comments. A number <strong>of</strong> commenters across several <strong>certification</strong> criteria<br />

requested that we clarify the meaning <strong>of</strong> “human readable format.” These commenters<br />

questioned what human readable format meant when it was used in the <strong>certification</strong><br />

criteria and <strong>of</strong>fered examples <strong>of</strong> what they thought would constitute human readable<br />

format such as, style sheets and PDFs. A couple <strong>of</strong> commenters suggested that human<br />

readable format should consider patients’ linguistic needs. A commenter requested we<br />

discuss the compliance requirements associated with the Americans with Disabilities Act<br />

and the relevant sections <strong>of</strong> the Rehabilitation Act <strong>of</strong> 1973 to ensure human readable<br />

format was meant to include an obligation to provide people with disabilities alternative<br />

formats such as large print or Braille.<br />

Page 34 <strong>of</strong> 228

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