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Title: MHV 404: Secure Messaging for the Quadrad


1
MHV 404 Secure Messagingfor the Quadrad
  • David M. Douglas MD
  • July 16, 2008

2
Learning Objectives
  • Experience the Secure Messaging Application from
    the viewpoint of the various users
  • Veteran
  • Provider (Physician, NP, PA)
  • Clinical Team Member (RN, Rx, Medical Assistant)
  • Triage Staff
  • Administrator
  • Understand how message templates and triage
    groups are set up to increase efficiency and
    limit information overload to the Primary Care
    Provider
  • Follow a message through its life cycle including
    capture to CPRS

3
Agenda
  • Introduction to MHV and Secure Messaging
  • Secure Messaging Pilot Project
  • SM from various User Perspectives
  • Secure Messaging Templates
  • Triage Groups and Business Models
  • How the Quadrad can help
  • QA

4
Portland VA Medical Center
  • 303 bed tertiary care facility
  • 2 Divisions
  • 4 CBOCs and 2 more planned for FY 2009
  • 59,000 Uniques/yr
  • 608,000 Clinic Visits/yr
  • 8600 Admits/yr
  • MHV Pilot Site
  • MHV IPA Leader
  • MHV SM Test Site

5
What is a Personal Health Record?
  • The Personal Health Record (PHR) is an
    Internet-based set of tools that allows people to
    access and coordinate their lifelong health
    information.
  • People can use their PHR as a communications hub
    to send electronic messages to doctors, transfer
    information to specialists, receive test results
    and access online self-help tools.
  • Markle Foundation

6
MHV is VAs Award Winning PHR
http//www.reuters.com/article/pressRelease/idUS16
853727-Dec-2007PRN20071227
7
My HealtheVet Vision
IMAGINE gtgtgt gtgtgt
Knowledgeable patients are better able to make
informed health care choices, stay healthy,
and seek services when they need them.
  • Electronic records
  • Comprehensive accessible record for all sites of
    care
  • Patient safety
  • Decision support
  • Care coordination
  • Partnerships

8
Pilot Informs National Release
My HealtheVet Pilot
  • Medical Record Extracts
  • Self-entered Metrics
  • Patient Health Education Libraries
  • Delegation
  • Demographics, Admissions, Appointments,
    Prescriptions
  • Vitals Allergies
  • Progress Notes, Discharge Summaries
  • Basic Problem List information
  • Lab Reports Chemistry, Microbiology, Microscopy,
    Cytology, Pathology
  • ECG Radiology reports
  • Wellness Reminders
  • Co-payment Balances

www.health-evet.va.gov
N 7,500 pilot participants at nine VAMCs
9
My HealtheVet National Program
  • Online Prescription Refills
  • Health Education Information
  • Condition Centers
  • Self-assessment Tools
  • Health Journals e-Logs
  • Veteran Specific Conditions
  • Seasonal Health Reminders
  • Wellness Calendar
  • Complete Medications View
  • and more

www.myhealth.va.gov
Incremental releases of new features (VistA EHR,
Secure Messaging, Delegation)
10
Robust Patient Health Education
Common Conditions Age-Related Macular
Degeneration Bipolar Disorder Cataracts Colds
Colorectal Cancer Depression Diabetes
Diabetic Retinopathy Glaucoma Coronary Heart
Disease Heart Failure High Blood Cholesterol
Hypertension Influenza Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder Schizophrenia Stroke
Healthy Living Centers Healthy Eating Physical
Activity Center Smoking Tobacco Use
Cessation Mental Health Screening Tools Alcohol
Use Screening (AUDIT-C) Depression Screening
(PHQ-9) PTSD Screening (PCL) Substance Abuse
Screening (ASSIST) Medical Libraries MedlinePlus
HealthWise Service Related Conditions
(VHI) Spinal Cord Injury Post Traumatic Stress
Disorder Traumatic Brain Injury Hearing Impairment
11
3-Tier Access Model
  • 3 Tier
  • Access
  • Model
  • Visitors
  • Registrants
  • In Person Authentication (IPA)

12
Personal Information

Personal Information In Case of
Emergency Printable Wallet Card My
Profile Account Management
www.myhealth.va.gov
13
Pharmacy

Pharmacy Refill Prescriptions Prescriptions
History Medications, OTC, Herbals,
Supplements Complete Medication List
www.myhealth.va.gov
14
Research Centers for Health

Research Health Healthy Living Centers Diseases
and Condition Centers Service Related
Conditions Common Conditions Mental
Health Medical Library MedlinePlus HealthWise
www.myhealth.va.gov
15
Accessing Care

Get Care Caregivers Providers and
Physicians Treatment Facilities Treatment
Locations My Coverage Health Insurance Health
Calendar
www.myhealth.va.gov
16
Tracking Health

Track Health Vitals Readings Labs
Tests Health History Family Health
History Military History Allergies Immunizations J
ournals Personal Health Summary
www.myhealth.va.gov
17
Enhancements planned for My HealtheVet
  • FY08 MHV Releases
  • View Appointments
  • Chemistry/Lab Extracts
  • Patient/Clinician Secure Messaging
  • Wellness Reminders (patient friendly view of
    Clinical Reminders)
  • FY09 MHV Releases PHR Extracts
  • Content Management System
  • Metrics and Clinical Reporting Infrastructure
  • My Recovery Plan
  • CPRS view of Veteran Self-Entered Data
  • Disaster Recovery Site

18
Secure Messaging (SM)
Veteran Portal Send to Team Read Respond Health
Care Team Portal Read a Message Send a
Message Forward a Message Admin. Functions
Secure Messaging
19
Advantages of Electronic Messaging
  • Asynchronous communication
  • More efficient than phone or FAX
  • Creates a searchable record
  • Can be Latered
  • Message can be crafted on your time and your
    schedule.
  • Enables performance improvement through
    management reports
  • Shipley/Schwalbe

20
Comparison of Secure Messaging and E-Mail
21
An Example of Message Breakdown (3000 msgs/11
months)
SourceUniversity of Michigan - Steve Katz,
MDJAMIA, Nov.2004
22
Other Experience with Secure Messaging
  • Patient Access to an Electronic Health Record
    With Secure Messaging Impact on Primary Care
    Utilization
  • A study performed by Kaiser Permanente on a large
    population that showed a 7 to 10 drop in
    outpatient visits and a 14 drop in telephone
    contacts as a result of secure messaging.
  • Experiences of Patients Who Were Early Adopters
    of Electronic Communication With Their Physician
    Satisfaction, Benefits, and Concerns
  • A study in the American Journal of Managed Care
    that showed 95 of respondents felt e-mail was a
    more efficient means of communication with their
    physicians than the telephone. 77 said they
    were able to communicate without a face-to-face
    appointment.

23
SM Pilot Project Charge Letter
  • SM intended to be a VA standard of care
  • Pilot Project limited to Primary care and
    intended to
  • Demonstrate technical integrity and usability
  • Design and test business models
  • Develop approaches for In-Person Authentication
    (IPA)
  • Formulate recommendations for national
    implementation

24
SM Pilot Project Charge Letter
  • Goals for National Release
  • Wide adoption of SMS by patients
  • High provider satisfaction with the system
  • Ongoing measurement of volume, response times and
    escalation rates, demonstrating safe and
    effective practices within VHA

25
SM Implementation Co-Chairs David Douglas MD
and Brian Laufer MD
  • SM Pilot Sites
  • Boston Portland
  • Puget Sound Washington DC
  • Local Implementation Teams
  • PCP, RN, Rx, IT, CAC, Telephone Care, Clerical
    and Admin Support, MHV POC
  • Weekly Teleconferences and Sharepoint
  • National Support
  • MHV Office, Patient Safety, Patient Education,
    Usability, Public Affairs,
  • Vendor Support
  • Patriot Technologies

26
Local SM Project Charter
  • Project Team Development
  • Identify Management Team, meeting schedule
  • Identify Implementation Team, meeting schedule
  • Establish communication mechanism
  • Practice/Provider Recruitment
  • Provide briefing to Primary Care
  • Identify Primary Care providers and Staff who
    will participate
  • Identify associated Customer Service Specialists,
    Nurse Care Managers, Schedulers, and any other
    staff who may be involved.

27
Local SM Project Charter
  • Current Telecommunication Processes
  • Examine current telecommunication processes
  • Map out VA Telephone Care Information flow for
    use opportunity of overlay of SMS
  • Identify all communication processes of
    participating providers and staff that fall
    outside of Telephone Care (pharmacy, laboratory)
  • Patient Recruitment Options
  • Determine the number of patients previously
    through the IPA process or waiting for the IPA
    process, who are in panels of participating
    Primary Care providers.
  • Identify options for recruiting patients,
    including those IPAd and new prospects. Examine
    opportunities for more intensive recruitment
    efforts, and who must be involved.
  • Secure Messaging Models
  • Explore models used in other organizations
    Group Health, Kaiser, Greenfield, etc.

28
Testing and Implementation Phases
  • March 2008 Pre-Alpha Testing focused on
    Technical Integrity and Usability
  • June 2008 SM Functionality Testing
  • August 2008 SM Administrative Functionality
  • September 2008 National Release
  • Tentative

29
SM Metrics
  • Secure Messaging Performance Evaluation
    encompasses
  • system reports (including the development of a
    dashboard for common metrics)
  • satisfaction surveys for patient, provider, and
    staff participants
  • a prioritized research agenda
  • related data comparisons external to the SM
    system for benchmarking (e.g. telephone workload,
    visits workload)

30
Workload Credit
  • A SECONDARY stop code, 719, will be implemented
    10/1/08
  • Primary stop code remains the same as is
    currently used (e.g. primary care stop code that
    is currently used for outpatient clinic)
  • Messages that meet the criteria for an on-line
    evaluation can be saved as a TIU progress note
  • An on-line medical evaluation is defined as a
    non-face to face evaluation and management (EM)
    code
  • Codes are broken out into services provided by
  • Physician-99444
  • Qualified nonphysician health care professional

31
Workload Credit
  • An evaluation and management service MUST occur
    in order to use this code
  • A problem must be present
  • Review of patient history must be done
  • A recommendation or medical decision making must
    be documented
  • Code is used only ONCE for the SAME episode of
    care in a 7 day period
  • Patient must be an established patient
  • Communication can be with PATIENT, GUARDIAN OR
    HEALTH CARE PROFESSIONAL
  • EXAMPLE 1 An established patient sends secure
    message to her physician outlining an onset of
    new symptoms. The physician reviews the patients
    history and determines that a medication
    adjustment is in order. The physician advices
    the patient to adjust her medications. The
    patient is to contact the physician in 2 weeks if
    the symptoms do not improve.

32
Secure Messaging User Types
33
The Tour of SMS
  • We are going to take a tour of SMS from various
    perspectives
  • Veteran
  • Provider (Physician, NP, PA)
  • Clinical Team Member (RN, Rx, Medical Assistant)
  • Triage Staff
  • Administrator
  • We are going to see some of the major
    functionality for each of our users

34
Veteran Accesses SM
35
Veteran Inbox
36
Veteran replying to messages
37
Veteran sends a message
38
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39
SM launched from CPRS Tools
40
Provider, Clinical Team Member, Triage Staff
Access SM
41
PCP Inbox
42
PCP Views Message
43
Replying to a message
44
Clinician Search for a Recipient
45
Clinician Create a Personal Distribution Group
46
Clinician and Patient New Message Notification
  • This allows patients and clinicians to be
    notified at an e-mail address that they have new
    messages.
  • Only the fact that messages have arrived is sent
    in the e-mail. No message content is ever sent.
  • Users can set the threshold for notifications to
    be sent so they do not have to be notified every
    time a single message arrives.

47
Patient clicks on Preferences
48
New Message Notification Patient
49
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50
New Message Notification Provider
51
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52
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53
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54
Clinician Triage Perform Clinician Triage
55
Clinician Triage Perform Clinician Triage
56
Administrator Create a Clinician Triage Group
57
Administrator Run Reports
58
System Reports
  • Messages by Provider
  • Messages by Triage Group
  • Messages by Category
  • Discovery Audit Report
  • System Health Monitor
  • Active Participant Report
  • Response Turnaround Time Report

59
On Demand Reports
  • Providers Opted In
  • Clinical Team Members Opted In
  • Triage Staff Opted In
  • Patients Opted In
  • Messages Escalated
  • Provider Messages
  • Clinical Team Member Messages
  • Triage Staff Messages
  • Patient Messages
  • Total Messages
  • Messages Saved as TIU Notes
  • Messages Read
  • Messages Unread

60
Secure Messaging Templates
  • Insert pre-defined content into body of message
  • Allows messages to be categorized by type
  • Template categories given to SM workgroup were
  • Rx, Appointment, Lab or Test Result, Change of
    Address, Health Information, and Administrative
  • Analysis of 50 Telephone Care Messages
  • 1) PCP Appt  12/50 24
  • 2) Rx Refill/Renewal 17/50 34
  • 3) Health Information 17/50 34
  • 4) Specialty Referral 2/50 1
  • 5) Laboratory/Test Info 6/50 12
  • 6) Administrative Issue 5/50 10

61
SM Templates
62
Secure Messaging Templates
  • SM Template functionality is SIMPLE (Think
    Google)
  • Sender sees a pull down list of templates
  • Selecting a template inserts boilerplate text
  • Further development of the message is limited to
  • Inserting Xs between left and right square
    brackets X to indicate a choice or to indicate
    that the text that follows applies.
  • Filling in blanks _______ left in template
    sentences to provide the necessary information.
  • Deleting text that does not apply to this
    message.
  • Adding text by keystroke.

63
Request Appointment
64
Appointment Scheduled
65
Change of Address Template
66
Lab or Test Result Template
67
Health Information Template
68
Administrative Issue Template
69
Request Rx Renewal
70
Rx Message in the Inbox
71
Rx has been renewed
72
Save to CPRS?
73
Rx Renewal Thread saved to CPRS
74
Patient requests another renewal
75
PCP replies
76
PCP saves to CPRS
77
Thread saved as an Addendum
78
Patient reads the reply
79
Preferences include Distribution Groups
80
Create a Personal Distribution Group
81
Potential Business Models
82
Potential Business Models
83
Potential Business Models
84
Potential Business Models
85
12 step program for successful implementation
  • Identify Facility and Clinical Champions
  • Establish Clinical Adoption Timeline
  • Identify Executive Sponsors
  • Identify Implementation Team
  • Plan SM Communications and Outreach
  • Healthcare Team and Staff Recruitment
  • Communications Workflow Mapping
  • Patient Recruitment
  • Table Top Exercise
  • Education and Training
  • Go Live Event
  • Success Measurement

86
Identify Facility and Clinical Champions
  • Recommended Timeframe
  • Identification of the SM Facility and Clinical
    Champions should be completed at least three
    months prior to the scheduled Go Live Date.
  • Success Activities
  • The SM Facility Champion and SM Clinical Champion
    are selected.
  • Champions review the National Clinical Adoption
    Implementation Guide, SM Clinical Adoption
    Toolkit and SM Implementation Checklist to
    understand scope of work.
  • SM Implementation Checklist
  • Depending on the size of the facility and
    workloads of the SM Facility Champion and SM
    Clinical Champion, SM Coordinators can be
    identified to handle functions as assigned.

87
Establish Clinical Adoption Timeline
  • The SM Facility and Clinical Champions together
    create a draft Time Table that identifies when
    Key Steps must occur for a successful
    implementation.
  • Recommended Timeframe
  • This step should be completed at least three
    months prior to the Go Live Date and prior to the
    first meeting of the Executive Sponsors.
  • Success Activities
  • Review SM Clinical Adoption Time Line, your local
    schedules, events and dependencies which will
    affect your Time Table.

88
Identify Executive Sponsors
  • Identify Executive Sponsors such as Facility
    Director, Chief Informatics Officer, Chief of
    Staff, Nurse Executives and others. Encourage
    their participation by highlighting the
    facilitys role as an innovator in MHV Personal
    Health Record (PHR) e-health services adoption.
  • Develop SM Charter for Executive Sponsor
    Sign-Off.
  • Contact sponsors and call first meeting.
  • Discuss requirements and assignment of human and
    financial resources required to successfully
    implement SM.
  • Secure necessary resources.
  • Establish executive briefing schedule to keep
    Executive Sponsors apprised of the implementation
    status. These briefings may be included as part
    of other regularly-scheduled meetings at which
    all Executive Sponsors attend.
  • Facilitate Executive Sponsor briefings to VISN
    executives and other relevant committees.

89
Identify Implementation Team
  • SM Clinical Champion
  • Nurses
  • Primary Care Physician
  • Lab
  • Pharmacist
  • Clinical Application Coordinators
  • Administrative Assistants
  • IT Representative
  • MHV POC
  • SM Clinical Coordinator
  • Public Affairs Office

90
Communications and Outreach
  • Identify target internal and external audiences
  • Develop a plan to determine when and how
    audiences will receive communications
  • Select and initiate production of approved
    communications products
  • Identify significant facility events during which
    SM may be promoted.
  • Create a plan to deliver products and promotion
    activities to audiences within a stated schedule.
  • Identify delivery dates for communications
    products and place delivery dates and
    Communications and Outreach events into SM
    Implementation Time Table.
  • Produce communications products needed locally to
    deliver messages to local audience groups.

91
Healthcare Team and Staff Recruitment
  • Introduce SM to appropriate healthcare providers
    and staff.
  • Identify Primary Care Providers, healthcare teams
    and staff who will participate in the initial
    roll out. Work with the participating Primary
    Care Providers to identify triage team members.
    Provide triage team members contact information
    to SM Administrator to set up access.
  • Depending on the scope of your facility rollout,
    SM Coordinators can be identified to handle
    functions as assigned at the clinic or healthcare
    team level.

92
Communications Workflow Mapping
  • Using Sample Workflows and SM workflows developed
    at Alpha Test Sites as templates, map current
    patient communication workflow processes. Include
    communications routed to other departments such
    as pharmacy and emergency.
  • Map VA Telephone Care Information and other local
    patient communications flows for an opportunity
    to adapt as SM model.
  • Based on the workflows you document for your
    facility, develop and record a proposed SM
    Patient Communications Workflow
  • Validate workflows with SM Facility Champion.

93
Patient Recruitment
  • Identify options for recruiting patients.
    Consider patients who are in
  • Specific chronic disease or high-risk diagnosis
    management populations
  • Telehealth/e-communications programs
  • Determine the Primary Care Physicians patients
    who are interested in participating and meet the
    required criteriaMHV registrants and have
    completed the IPA process.
  • Secure patients acknowledgement of participating
    status through IPA process.
  • Present SM as a roll out e-health service when
    discussing participation with patients. Explain
    that not every patient or provider will have
    access to SM when the service goes live at your
    facility. Healthcare teams and IPAed patients
    will be added as quickly as the facility can
    manage.

94
Table Top Exercise
  • Plan the SM communications triage/routing
    processes.
  • This exercise is an efficient and thorough method
    of testing your triage model assumptions and
    identifying communication gaps.
  • For the Table Top Exercise, prepare sample
    messages that reflect typical patient-healthcare
    team interchanges at your facility that test all
    aspects of your proposed SM communications
    process.
  • Document your workflow decisions and communicate
    this process to the SM Facility Champion and all
    participating healthcare teams.

95
Education and Training
  • A good working knowledge of how SM works and how
    it contributes to a patient-centric,
    consumer-driven, provider friendly healthcare
    system goes a long way toward speeding adoption
    by patients and healthcare teams.
  • Success Activities
  • Establish an education and training plan using
    approved VHA training resources.
  • Education Links (Hyperlinked to VHA sites)
  • Patient Links (Hyperlinked to VHA sites)
  • Healthcare Team Links (Hyperlinked to VHA
    sites)
  • Obtain training materials and identify
    presenters.
  • Schedule training starting at least one month
    prior and completing no later than two weeks
    prior to the Go Live Date.

96
Go Live Event
  • Working with the SM Facility Champion and
    Executive Sponsors, determine date, time, scope
    and format for event
  • SM Overview Presentation
  • SM Patient Brochures
  • SM Patient Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
  • Healthcare Team Brochures
  • Healthcare Team Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

97
Success Measurement
  • System reports
  • Provider Opt In
  • Patient Opt In
  • Message Escalation
  • Others
  • Satisfaction surveys for patient, provider, and
    staff participants
  • Benchmark against Telephone Care Volume

98
3-Tier Access Model
  • 3 Tier
  • Access
  • Model
  • Visitors
  • Registrants
  • In Person Authentication (IPA)

99
Visitors
100
Registrants
101
In-Person Authentication
  • In-Person Authentication (IPA) is a process used
    to verify a My HealtheVet (MHV) user's identity.
    Registered MHV users who are VA patients that
    have completed the IPA process will be able to
    view the names of their VA prescriptions.
  • Before In Person Authentication can occur,
    several requirements must be met
  • The user must be registered as a VA patient in
    their MHV account
  • The user must view the MHV Orientation Video
  • The user must download, read and sign the VA
    Form, 10-5345a-MHV (PDF)
  • The user must present a form of government issued
    photo identification to a qualified VA staff
    member at their VA facility to be physically
    proofed

102
Why is In-Person Authentication so important?
  • Important enhancements to MHV will only be
    available to veterans who have been IPAd
  • Secure Messaging
  • Vista Extracts
  • Co-Pay Balances

103
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104
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105
IPA stats by VISN and Facility
128 Facilities.Top 10 are bolded.
106
Some sobering statistics on IPA
  • 5.5 million veteran patients in VHA
  • 70 thousand have been IPAd or 1.3
  • 221,000 unique veterans will be seen in VISN 20
    in FY 08
  • 7310 have been IPAd or 3.3
  • 59,000 unique veterans will be seen at Portland
    VAMC in FY 08
  • 4807 have been IPAd or 8.1
  • At this rate, it would take 100 years to IPA 5.5
    million veterans! ?

107
IPA requires strong support from the Quadrad
  • Hire 1-2 full time staff dedicated to IPA
  • Monitor weekly IPA reports
  • Set stretch goals for IPA and incorporate them
    into performance contracts
  • Create an enrollment kiosk and place it in the
    part of the hospital with the highest visibility
    and heaviest traffic flow (usually main hospital
    lobby)
  • Create IPA enrollment packets and take them to
    waiting rooms (Rx, Radiology, Specialty Clinics,
    Primary Care) where veterans have a lot of time
    on their hands. Ask veterans to fill out the
    forms and bring them to the kiosk later.

108
IPA requires strong support from the Quadrad
  • Take IPA enrollment packets to inpatients and go
    back to pick them up later.
  • Visit CBOCs and train check-in clerks to IPA
    veterans
  • Ask facility CIO to allow you to check out a
    laptop with a broadband card to take to off
    station events.
  • Give presentations to Veteran Service
    Organizations and ask them to invite you to off
    station events which veterans will attend (VSO
    meetings, Veterans Day, Memorial Day, 4th of July
    Events, Veteran Workfairs, etc)
  • Give presentation to your transition advocate and
    ask to accompany him/her to events for veterans
    transitioning from DOD to VA

109
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110
GS-4 IPA Program Support Clerk
111
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112
IPA Kiosk
113
IPA Kiosk
114
National Rollout of Secure Messaging
  • Secure Messaging will be implemented as a phased
    release
  • Round 1 is expected to include at least 1
    facility per VISN and will be restricted to
    primary care. Clinical adoption guidelines,
    toolkit materials, and related processes
    established during SM testing phases will be
    employed during Round 1. Prior to launching
    Round 1, we expect a memorandum to be sent to
    VISN management providing SM implementation-relate
    d guidance. The duration of Round 1 has not yet
    been determined.
  • VISNs will play a central/critical role during
    the implementation of Secure Messaging
  • VISNs will designate Round 1 sites and will work
    with National MHV Office and others to establish
    SM schedules for the remaining sites within their
    VISNs. During Round 1, each VISN is expected to
    establish implementation teams that will lead
    rollout efforts during subsequent rounds within
    their respective VISNs.
  • A suspense date for completing the national
    rollout of Secure Messaging has not yet been
    determined.

115
Resources
  • My HealtheVet Portal www.myhealth.va.gov
  • My HealtheVet Product Website ( Internet)
  • http//vaww.appc1.va.gov/MyHealtheVet/
  • My HealtheVet/VALU IT Training Website (Internet)
  • http//vaww.vistau.med.va.gov/VistaU/mhv/default.h
    tmLinks

116
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