Thursday, April 7, 2016

The Patient-Centered Health Record




By Peter Elias,  M.D.

Founding Physician
Family Health Care Associates




The other night I participated in a very useful Google+ hangout. The discussion focused on a subject I think is incredibly important: the patient-centered health record. Unfortunately, this topic is hard to discuss without drowning in technical terms and acronyms. I consider myself fairly tech-savvy and still struggle.


A (55 minute) YouTube video is here: Click here I think it is worth watching. But before watching it, consider reviewing the following basic information to help set the stage, first without tech terms or acronyms, and then repeated with some of the key jargon.

The current EHR model is that each office or institution owns and manages an electronic record that contains information about the patients in that system. Despite the obvious need and lots of talk, there has been little actual progress towards making these separate and mostly proprietary systems ‘interoperable’ and therefore able to share information. The result is that clinicians routinely work with incomplete or outdated information, patients are locked into their home system, and it is extremely hard for patients to access their own information in any meaningful or useful way. Care is less safe and less reliable, patients are prevented from actively managing their care, and clinicians are frustrated.

The model discussed in this video takes a different approach, one that appeals to me for both philosophical and technical reasons.

In this model:

The basic unit is a one-patient record unique to the individual patient.

    • It is ‘open source’ meaning that the code is public, maximizing the ability to improve or modify it and create added pieces for new functions.
    • This basic unit and its information are owned and controlled by the patient.
    • This is where all the health and medical information about an individual patient is stored.
    • It contains the most current, complete and up-to-date information.
    • The patient has full access to their individual record.
  • This patient-centered health record has a component that allows the patient to control access by others, essentially inviting their clinicians (or others) to see and use the information.
  • Clinicians can access the system through their own software using one of two mechanisms:
    • Using a straightforward process which gives them access to multiple separate patient records, and they work in the actual patient record.
    • Using their proprietary clinician or institution owned system, which is linked to and synchronized with the patient’s individual record.
    • In both cases, the ‘official’ version of the information is the patient-centered record, fully accessible to the patient.
  • There are standardized connections between the clinician-based systems and the multiple patient-based records.

That was English. Now a version of the same information with some jargon:
  • The patient has a record (EHR) to store his or her health information
  • The patient has a record (EHR) to store his or her health information
    • Ideally it is ‘open source’ such as NOSH (New Open Source Health Charting System) by Michael Chen.  Read more about this at https://noshemr.wordpress.com/.
    • It is owned and controlled by the patient.
    • It is where all the health information about an individual patient is stored.
    • It functions as the ‘Source of Truth.’
    • The patient has full access.
  • The patient-centered record (such as NOSH) has a component that allows the patient to control who can see, change or use the information.
    • This is sometimes called UMA (for user management and authentication).
    • It has other names such as HIE of One (health information exchange of one).
    • This is what allows the patient to manage who has access.
  • Clinicians access the system through their own software using one of two mechanisms:
    • They use a parallel open-source software system that has a list of the patients using individual patient records they have been authenticated to use.
    • They use (work in) their institution’s proprietary system which is linked to and synchronized with the official patient-owned record.
    • In both cases, the patient’s record is the Source of Truth and fully accessible to the patient.
  • There are interfaces that make connections work.
    • Other ‘application program interfaces’ (APIs) can be developed or used, especially if the system is open source.

There are several important considerations in a system like this:
  • Open source improves security, adaptability, flexibility
  • It is based on the assumption that patients should have full control over their health information according to their own needs, not just be given limited access by clinicians or their systems.
  • If patients have full control over access to their health information, it goes without saying that they can access their own health information without either delay or barriers.
  • It can be adopted incrementally rather than requiring the entire US healthcare system to turn a switch.
  • Patients and clinicians can help us move from where we are now to a patient-centered health record system by:
    • Understanding the concept.
    • Being at least somewhat familiar with the terminology.
    • And MAKING NOISE about wanting a system like this in their local setting.
Peter Elias is a family physician in Maine. He blogs at http://petereliasmd.com.

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