Here's my take on the Defense Department's latest update on the proposed joint Pentagon/Veterans Affairs Department Electronic Health Record development project:
The goal of the project is to create a new electronic health-record system for use by the Military Health System and the Veterans Health Administration. Together, they operate about 110 hospitals and 1,100 clinics.
The 55-page report, "Department of Defense Enterprise Architecture to Guide the Transition of the DoD Electronic Health Record, and Related Matters," quickly turns into alphabet soup. By page 5, readers are already wading through paragraphs of brain-numbers: "The DoD/VA functional community leads the requirements development process through the FCPG, under the guidance of the ICIB. The FCPG identifies and defines proposed joint functional capabilities, then orients baseline architectural artifacts with the logical construct of the ECCF. A C-IPT—guided by the ECCF—re-engineers joint functional processes and supplements the descriptive content of architectural artifacts, as needed."
Two dangers loom for our boat of national affairs from this almost impenetrable fog.