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Personal Health Records: Whose Right? Whose Responsibility? Whose Cost?

Personal Health Records: Whose Right? Whose Responsibility? Whose Cost?. Patricia Flatley Brennan, RN, PhD, FAAN University of Wisconsin-Madison Supported by grants from the National Library of Medicine, Intel Corporation, and the Moehlman Bascom Professorship, UW-Madison . Plan for the talk.

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Personal Health Records: Whose Right? Whose Responsibility? Whose Cost?

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  1. Personal Health Records:Whose Right? Whose Responsibility? Whose Cost? Patricia Flatley Brennan, RN, PhD, FAAN University of Wisconsin-Madison Supported by grants from the National Library of Medicine, Intel Corporation, and the Moehlman Bascom Professorship, UW-Madison

  2. Plan for the talk • Personal Health Records • Definition and History • PHR’s in the NHII • PHRs: Functional Requirements • Necessary steps in achieving functional PHR • Rights • Responsibility • Cost • Envisioning a PHR System that supports personal & population health

  3. Somewhere, not too far away... John, a 41 year old man, presents at an annual physical two major complaints: right lower quadrant tenderness and a slight change in bowel habits Shortly, however, the diagnosis is confirmed: Familial Adenemotosis Polyposis (FAP)

  4. DNA tests identify that the mutation is on Codon 1251. Fear, and hope, lead John to consult all of the experts he can find. John’s doctor, believing in collaboration, sends John all of the reports, makes a recommendation of surgery and solicits John’s preferences. John searches the Web, opts for surgery

  5. John & his physician talk I think you havea bowel problem What’s wrong? 00100-11100-1-110001000-1110011000010001100101 RLQ tenderness ??? Family history ??? Blood Test

  6. Electronic Health Recordstranslate patient state into computable forms SnoMED NANDA CPT 011011--01100-00-1100 The patient’s state Computer Records The Clinician’s Assessment

  7. A complete picture of the patient needs lots of data! Genotype-match 0001000- 0001000- Serum sodium 131 Atph 74 Hgb 41 John = 0001000-1000111 10001111000100 John’s family members’records 0001000- 0001000- Insurance authorization: OK Best practices

  8. We think health care occurs here But health, and much of health care, happens here

  9. Personal Health Information Management

  10. ? ? ? ?? Manage INFORMATION ? ?

  11. Information Managed in the Home: Appointments Contact Info Insurance Treatments Provider Info Literature

  12. The Contexts of Care • Living Environment • Social Environments • Psychological Environments • Technological Environments • Health Services Environments

  13. The single, most important, personal health information management tool in the home…

  14. Where Do People get Health Information? Family Physician

  15. But it’s not just one health care provider… it could be 2, or 4, or 8, or…

  16. The challenge of personal health information management • Clinical encounters with > 4 providers a year • Recalling what happened when and with whom • Sorting information from > 10 sources • Patient-net: patients as an information intermediary

  17. Components of a personal health information system Clinical Records Self-Monitoring Decision Support Communication

  18. A solution on the horizon? NHII:Regional health information exchanges organized aroundpersonal health records

  19. Regional Health Information Exchange

  20. Prov Payers Pt PH PBM Labs Structure & Benefits of Health Information Exchange • Payers • Improved service • Improved clinical management • Better information • Providers • Timely access • Rapid universal access • Increased safety quality • Better coordinated care • Patient • Improved quality • Safer care • Decreased cost Public Health • Early detection • Outcomes analysis • Bio-terrorism preparedness Pharmacies/PBMs • Reduced administrative costs • Increased prescription compliance Commercial Labs • Enhanced public relations; • Decreased EDI costs • Efficiencies After Stead et al, 2005

  21. Personal Health Records The Personal Health Record is (an Internet-based) set of tools that allows people to access and coordinate their life-long health information and make appropriate parts of it available to those who need it. Personal Health Records Working Group, Markle Foundation, 2003

  22. ELECTRONIC RECORDS: Electronic Health Records, Electronic Patient Records & Personal Health Records EPR EHR PHR After Stead et al, 2005

  23. Lay people develop robust, complex mechanisms of health information management in the home.

  24. Personal Health Records… • are controlled by the person who decides which parts of their PHR can be accessed, by whom and for how long. • contain information from one’s entire lifetime. • contain information from all health care providers. • are accessiblefrom any place at any time. • are private and secure. • are “transparent.” • enable exchange of information with other health information systems and health professionals.

  25. What would people do with a PHR? • Email my doctor • Track immunizations • Note mistakes in my record • Transfer information to new doctors • Get and track my test results

  26. Maintaining contact with health care providers is a necessary but not sufficient function of PHRs!

  27. What is health care & who’s involved? Disease Self Help Self Care Management Personal Health Record System Patient Professional Community

  28. PHR’s:Functional Requirements

  29. PHRs • Information • Communication • Education • Risk Appraisal • Disease Management • Health Promotion • Scheduling

  30. PHRs: Essential Attributes Ubiquitous Accurate Authoritative Available Comprehensible Current Complete

  31. Making PHRs a reality • Rights • Costs • Responsbilities

  32. PHRs:Whose right?

  33. Rights • Patient’s right …to know …control access • Care partnership rights • Trusted communication • Mutuality • Society’s rights of awareness

  34. Balancing Stakeholder Rights • Patient • Provider • Public Health • Payor • Policy Makers

  35. PHR’s: Whose Cost?

  36. Costs involved in PHRs • Device or artifact • Information acquisition and recording • Information organization & retrieval • Information transport • Information review and interpretation

  37. Who pays for the PHRs?

  38. Estimated Societal Impact of Health Information Exchange Sources: Center for Information Technology Leadership, Patient Safety Institute

  39. PHR’s: Whose Responsibility?

  40. Responsibilities • Data integrity • Data utilization • Attention to preferences • Continuity of Care • Adherence to treatment plan

  41. PHRs: Networks of Responsibility

  42. A Patient-centered Health Information Architecture Library Physician Office Personal Health Records Pharmacy Dentist Furtive Records Hospital Consumer Health Information

  43. Policies that support information exchange Infrastructure that enables information exchange Knowledgeable populace Engaged Providers Sustainable financial strategies Library Physician Office Personal Health Records Pharmacy Dentist Furtive Records Hospital Consumer Health Information Achieving a PHR-Centered Health Information Architecture

  44. “ask yourself if the step you contemplate is going to be of any use to the poorest and weakest man whom you have seenWill he gain anything by it?Will it restore him to control over his life and destiny?…then you will find your doubts and yourself melting away” Gandhi,1947

  45. healthsystems.engr.wisc.edu

  46. Consumer health informatics

  47. Bringing it all together Clinic Physician Office Computer-based Patient Record Pharmacy Dentist Furtive Records Consumer Health Information Hospital

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