The ONC Jira Core and Confluence support team will soon implement an account deactivation policy for all users who have not logged into the systems within the previous 90-days or more. To avoid the risk of having your account being deactivated, please immediately log into ONC Jira Core and Confluence as soon as possible.
Accounts that are deactivated will be retained, including historic activity. Users are able to reactivate their accounts using the correct credentials used prior to deactivation. If a user has forgotten their usernames or passwords, they can email onc-jira-questions@healthit.gov to request reactivation.
Reminder: Do not include any PHI or PII in JIRA. If you require 508 accessibility assistance, then please send an email to onc-jira-questions@healthit.gov
Login Support: If you encounter a captcha prompt, login issues, or believe your account may be deactivated and require assistance, please send an email to onc-jira-questions@healthit.gov
Providers can use the One Click Scorecard to evaluate the quality of clinical summary documents (C-CDAs) received, or created, by their system. Documents submitted may include PHI (See PHI Note below)
Non DirectTrust members, please request a counterparty trust setup by sending an email to:sitteam@hhs.gov
Background
The SITE C-CDA Scorecard enables providers, implementers, and health IT professionals with a tool that compares how artifacts created by health IT stack up against the HL7 C-CDA implementation guide and HL7 best practices. The "One Click Scorecard" is a provider-focused testing service where providers can send a Direct message with a C-CDA payload to ONC's service, then automatically receive a PDF file report of the C-CDA as a Direct message attachment.
Providers using the DirectTrust network can send a clinical summary documents (C-CDA) Direct message to scorecard@direct.hhs.gov and the One Click Scorecard service will return a letter grade (A, B, C, D) report to the sender. The report summarizes C-CDA quality against industry best practices and conformance to the ONC 2014-2015 certification requirements.
Notice Regarding the Disclosure of Protected Health Information
The disclosure of Protected Health Information (PHI) by health care providers and their business associates is only permitted under certain circumstances without patient authorization or a business associate agreement. One such circumstance is when PHI is disclosed to a “health oversight agency” (45 CFR 160.103; 45 CFR 164.501; 164.512(d)(1)(iii)). ONC, in its administration and oversight of the Health IT Certification Program, meets the definition of a “health oversight agency” (81 FR 72431).
Thus, health care providers and their business associates, if authorized by their business associate agreements, may disclose PHI to ONC while self-testing ONC-certified health IT via the “One Click Scorecard” benchmarking tool without patient authorization and without a business associate agreement with ONC.
Once a C-CDA is tested and scored, the entire C-CDA along with any PHI is immediately erased and is not retained. ONC will only retain the numerical scores generated during testing for benchmarking and industry-reporting.