Digital Health Record Initiative Aims To Unclog Bottleneck, But Doubts Remain
Federal health official announced that technology companies, hospital systems and doctors' groups have agreed to take steps that will make electronic health records easier to use including improving patient access to their own files, stop blocking health information sharing and put standards for digital communication between systems in place. But some worry the deal allows companies too much wiggle room.
The Associated Press:
Health Groups Aim To Make Records Easier To Access
Technology companies, hospital systems and doctors' groups have agreed to take steps to make electronic health records easier for consumers to access and use, the Obama administration announced Monday. While nearly all hospitals and most doctors' offices have now gone digital, those systems often don't talk to each other, limiting their usefulness to patients. The latest initiative is meant to speed removal of technological bottlenecks, but it's unclear if it will lead to breakthroughs. The administration needs to make things happen fast, since President Barack Obama leaves office in less than a year. (Alonso-Zaldivar, 3/1)
USA Today:
Health Companies Will Improve Digital Records, But Safety Concerns Linger
"It’s great to have an electronic record, but if that record can’t be easily accessed by doctors and patients because of clunky technology, then we aren’t consistently seeing the benefit," Health and Human Services Secretary Sylvia Burwell said in remarks prepared for delivery Monday night. The information in these records, also called electronic health records (EHRs), is also often blocked either on purpose or because there are misunderstandings about how the main health privacy law works, Burwell says. (O'Donnell, 2/29)
Meanwhile, Kaiser Health News looks at EHRs in the ER —
Kaiser Health News:
EHRs In The ER: As Doctors Adapt, Concerns Emerge About Medical Errors
The mouse slips, and the emergency room doctor clicks on the wrong number, ordering a medication dosage that’s far too large. Elsewhere, in another ER’s electronic health record, a patient’s name isn’t clearly displayed, so the nurse misses it and enters symptoms in the wrong person’s file. These are easy mistakes to make. As ER doctors and nurses grapple with the transition to digitalized record systems, they seem to happen more frequently. (Luthra, 3/1)