InvestorsHub Logo
Followers 17
Posts 1390
Boards Moderated 0
Alias Born 02/15/2012

Re: None

Wednesday, 06/12/2013 11:06:14 AM

Wednesday, June 12, 2013 11:06:14 AM

Post# of 77519
The PHR Concept Is Dead
Jun 11, 2013 09:11 am | By: Anne Zieger

For several years, the healthcare community has struggled with elusive beast known as a personal health record. The PHR was designed to fill a hole in the sharing of electronic health data by getting patients involved with filling in gaps in their own health information via a Web browser.

The idea is not new. In fact, according to WIkipedia, the idea of a “personal health log” goes all the way back to the 1950s, though scientific literature didn’t begin to take it on until after 2000, the Web encyclopedia says. So for decades, healthcare professionals have looked at ways in which private individuals could do more to document changes in their own health.

Fast forward to today, and what have we got? A bunch of approaches which involve the consumer in their medical data, including:

Patient portals: Typically, these portals offer access not only to various forms of basic clinical data — such as test results — but also a means of setting appointments with doctors’ offices and a means of communicating with physicians via secure e-mail.

Direct access to EMRs: In some cases, the portal established by a healthcare organization offers some limited direct acccess to EMR data, offering patients a look at a broader cross-section of data.
Giving patients access to doctors’ notes: Of late, some organizations have been experimenting with giving patients direct access to their doctors’ notes, experiments which have largely been satisfying to parties on both sides of the equasion.

Certainly, these approaches involve patients more in their health information, but at the same time, in no way make him or her responsible for maintaining their own health records electronically.

If you’ll notice, the core notion of a PHR – that patients should keep their doctors informed of med changes, allergies, procedures and the like — appears to have dropped out of the picture completely. It seems that after struggling with getting patients involved in being data entry clerks, it works much better to give patients access to data and encouraging them to learn from what they see.

In other words, despite much earnest effort, it appears that the core PHR concept is dead. Long live its better-adapted successors.

http://www.hospitalemrandehr.com/2013/06/11/the-phr-concept-is-dead/?utm_source=Hospital+EMR+and+EHR&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=dbde4594fe-RSS_EMAIL_CAMPAIGN&utm_content=Yahoo%21+Mail&utm_term=0_179ad21ba4-dbde4594fe-60795937

Related posts:

1.PHR Concept Maturing, But Still Not Popular With Consumers
http://www.hospitalemrandehr.com/2012/07/23/phr-concept-maturing-but-still-not-popular-with-consumers/

2.Hospitals, Health Systems And Clinics Adding Portals, But Consumers Not Synched Up
http://www.hospitalemrandehr.com/2012/12/17/hospitals-health-systems-and-clinics-adding-portals-but-consumers-not-synched-up/

3.Patient EMR Access May Be The Biggest Cultural Shift
http://www.hospitalemrandehr.com/2013/04/15/patient-emr-access-may-be-the-biggest-cultural-shift/

Join the InvestorsHub Community

Register for free to join our community of investors and share your ideas. You will also get access to streaming quotes, interactive charts, trades, portfolio, live options flow and more tools.