Jared Serbu writes VA officials told members of the House Veterans Affairs Committee Thursday that the department achieved compliance with interoperability standards for EHR systems April 8.
VA officials said the department have trained approximately 55,000 clinicians on the use of JLV and that it expects the number of trained personnel to reach 120,000 by the end of 2016.
The department noted that it plans to make JLV into a web-based interface that will work with VAâs VistA and DoDâs AHTLAÂ EHR systems through the Enterprise Health Management Platform.
VA plans to field eHMP across its medical centers in 2017, Serbu reports.
David Shulkin, VAâs undersecretary for health, told the House panel that the department might push for the VistA Scheduling Enhancement program instead of the Medical Appointment Scheduling System contract it awarded to Epic Systems in 2015 due to cost concerns.
LaVerne Council, VAâs assistant secretary for information technology, said at the hearing that her office has proposed a âdigital health platformâ that aims to deploy a  software-as-a-service, cloud-based platform designed to replace the VistA EHR system and consolidate all the departmentâs health IT tools into a single platform.