Title: E-Health: Personal Health Records
1E-Health Personal Health Records
- Don E. Detmer, MD, MA, FACMI
- President CEO
- American Medical Informatics Association
- Professor of Medical Education, University of
Virginia - 31 October 2005
- University of Edinburgh
2 American Medical Informatics Association
http//www.amia.org
3Power corrupts. Power Point corrupts absolutely.
4What is E-Health?
Any all aspects of the use of computers
telecommunications technology, especially the
Internet, for health purposes. (36 definitions
in literature) Pagliari C, Sloan D, Gregor P,
Sullivan F, Detmer DE, Kahan JP, Oortwin W,
McGillivray S What is eHealth (4) A Scoping
Exercise to Map the Field. JMIR 2005 (Mar31)
7(1)e9. see http//www.jmir.org/2005/1/e9/
5What is E-Health?
e-health is an emerging field of medical
informatics, referring to the organization and
delivery of health services and information using
the Internet and related technologies. In a
broader sense, the term characterizes not only a
technical development, but also a new way of
working, an attitude, and a commitment for
networked, global thinking, to improve health
care locally, regionally, and worldwide by using
information and communication technology.
(adapted from Eysenbach) Eysenbach G.
What is e-health? J Med Internet Res 2001 Jun
183(2)e20. FREE Full text Medline
CrossRef
6AMIAs Definition What is e-Health? v.4
- e-Health is the use of information technology to
transform health through health care systems that
are equitable, safe, effective, efficient,
patient-centred, timely, equitable. - - IOM, Crossing the Quality Chasm, 2002
(http//www.nap.edu)
7Global Status Today
- e-Health in nations regions around the world
varies greatly. - In general, health applications lag well behind
developments in air travel, banking, e-commerce,
entertainment, defense, finance.
8Current Status of E-Health
- What it is today.
- Mostly non-interactive websites
- Some interactive sites
- Some research sites
- Some viable E-health applications
- What it is not today.
- Globally available
- Supported by a robust infrastructure
- Just-in-time
- Just-for-me
- Standardized
- Culturally fit
9The New Realities
- Aging Populations
- Chronic Illness
- Rising Threats to General Population
- Weather
- Bioterrorism
- Global Infectious Disease
- Healthcare Costs are expanding.
- National Budgets are finite.
- Genomic Science must help.
- Health IT must help.
- Preserve Health.
10Personal Health Records Update
- Europe
- SUSTAINS ( Sweden)
- NHS Direct
- NHS Health Space
- USA
- Large Group Practices
- US Veterans Administration
- DOD
- Insurers/payers Corporations for Employees
11SUSTAINS (Supports Users To Access Information
Services)
- Provides users with access to their own medical
records through the Internet in Uppsala, Sweden - One-time passwords distributed through cell
phones - Provides access to data from hospital information
system, laboratory database, GP medical records
12Lessons from SUSTAINS
- Less complex technical environment is better for
users - Patients were most interested in seeing their
medical records, booking visits, communicating
with health care providers, viewing prescription
lists, reading fees - Most users were not concerned about security
risks - Appears to have increased confidence trust in
physicians - Eklund B and Joustra-Enquist I. 2004. SUSTAINS
Direct access for the patients to the medical
record over the Internet. In E-Health Current
Situation and Examples of Implemented and
Beneficial E-Health Applications, I Iakovidis, P
Wilson and JC Healy, eds. Amsterdam IOS Press.
13Evolution of Healthspace (https//www.healthspace.
nhs.uk)
- Phase 1
- Choose Book
- Calendar Reminders
- Health Details
- Library
- Phase 2 Electronic access to health records
- (Phase 3 Clicks Mortar Care?)
14NHS Direct 24x7 Access to Advice Information
- Serves England, Wales, Scotland
- Multi-Channel Service
- 23 call centers with decision support system
- NHS Direct Online (http//www.nhsdirect.nhs.uk/ind
ex.asp) - 200 NHS touch screen kiosks
- 1.7 million self-help guide books
- Digital TV
- Gann B. 2004. NHS Direct Online A multi-channel
eHealth service. . In E-Health Current
Situation and Examples of Implemented and
Beneficial E-Health Applications, I Iakovidis, P
Wilson and JC Healy, eds. Amsterdam IOS Press.
15PHRs ePHRs Emerging to Support Chronic Disease
Management
- Scotland Renal Patient View (www.renalpatientview
.org) - UK Diabetes UK is exploring migration of
paper-based patient held-summary sheet to ePHR - New Zealand Commercial ePHR, Doctor Global
enables remote tracking evaluation of health
conditions over time (e.g., asthma, cholesterol,
diabetes www.doctorglobal.com) - Australia My Health Record is a paper-based
record for patients with chronic illness in New
South Wales - Canada ePHR being developed for diabetes
management in New Brunswick (National Research
Council Institute for Information Technology)
16An Expanding View of Healthcare IT
Future Marketplace
Patient Safety
Clinical Trials
Consolidation
Electronic Health Record
Public Health
- Current Marketplace
- Fragmented
- Replacement
- Hospital-Centric
PersonalHealthRecords
communicate participate collaborate explore
learn
Patient-Centric
Family-Centric
National security
Health Record Banks
Interoperable
Genomic Data
Consumer Oriented
Source Safran 2005
17Digital Divides (USA)
- 93 Computer at work
- 25 get email from patients
- 21 send email to patients
- 17 report using EHR
- Survey family physicians School of Public
Communications Syracuse University July 2000 - 25 of online consumers say email usewould
influence their choice of a doctor - Delbanco T and Sands DZ NEJM April 2004
- Lower education socioeconomic levels do better
in randomized trials of disease monitoring / chat
room support groups - Gustafson et al CHESS
18Humility
19Difficulties Inherent in the Perspectives
Theories of Medical Work
- Current Clinical Systems are designed to be
- Objective
- Rationalize
- Linear
- Normalize
- Solitary
- Single minded
- Clinical Work is fundamentally
- Interpretative
- Multitasking
- Collaborative
- Distributed
- Opportunistic
- Reactive
- Interrupted frequently
-
- Wears RL, Berg M, Computer Technology and
Clinical Work Still Waiting for Godot
JAMA. 20052931261-1263.
20Average Encounter Timevs Complexity of Visit
21Why Focus on Patients Informal Caregivers?
The Benefits of the Informed Patient
- Better informed patients are
- Less anxious
- Treatment starts earlier
- Follow advice better, esp. chronic illness
management - Lower risk interventions are selected
- Healthcare costs drop through more
self-management a more efficient use of
resources - More satisfied litigate less
- - TIP I - 2003
22Fractured Patient Experiences
- Communications
- Erratic, Inconsistent, Obtuse, or Absent
- Information not layered to meet needs
- Issues of Trust Dignity
- Proven Uses of Technology e-Learning Not
Exploited
23e-Healthcare Models
- Web-based Education/Support
- One Way, Two Way, Chat / Support Groups
- E-mail only
- Internet Mediated Integrated Care (Clicks
Mortar) - Appointment scheduling
- Access to Electronic Medical Record
- Monitoring
- Verbal
- Device
- Prescription refills
- Consultation support
- Formal Decision Support
24Patient Interaction
- Collect Information
- Symptom diaries
- Administrative Tasks
- Scheduling
- Rx Refills
- Referrals
- Clinical Tasks
- Medication Refills
- Education
- Self-care
- Drug Interactions
- Reminders
- Preventive Health
- Communication
- Secure email
- Explanation of Benefits
Source Safran 2005
25- A Persons need for Health Information
- Easing Business Aspects
- Emergency Care
- Consultation(s)
- Care of Chronic Conditions
- Wellness Prevention
- Caring for loved ones at a distance
26Current Use of PHR
- Modest use of paper health records (40)
- Extremely low use of electronic personal health
records (2-5) - High percentage think they should
2004 Harris Interactive Inc.
Source Safran 2005
27What Do US Patients Say They Want?
- Over 70 percent of respondents would use one or
more features of the PHR - Email my doctor 75 percent
- Track immunizations 69 percent
- Note mistakes in my record 69 percent
- Transfer information to new doctors 65 percent
- Get track my test results 63
percent - Almost two-thirds (65 percent) of people with
chronic illness say they would use at least one
of the PHR features today, compared with 58
percent of those without chronic illness.
Source Connecting for Health and FACCT,
random-digit dialing telephone survey of 1,750
adults, May 2004
28Data the PHR
- Two types of data
- Patient entered Information provided directly by
the patient or caregiver. - Professionally entered Information provided by
entities involved in the delivery of or
reimbursement for care (e.g., clinicians,
pharmacies and pharmacy benefit managers,
insurance companies). - Challenges
- Applications that rely solely on patient-entered
data have not proven to be attractive to large
numbers of users or economically viable to
vendors. -
- Applications that attempt to exchange
professionally entered data face the challenge of
disparate, non-standardized often reluctant
institutional sources.
Source Safran 2005
29PHR Challenges
Source Safran 2005
30http//www.patientsite.org
Courtesy of Danny Z. Sands, MD
31- Mail
- Secure
- Automated routing
- Task assignment
- Services
- Prescription refills
- Appointment requests
- Referrals
- View bill
- Records
- Secure
- All CG records
- Upcoming appointments
- Meds/Problems/Results
- Personal records
- Education
- Info prescriptions
- Patient selected links
- Predefined collections
- Videos
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40Adherence Improved
- Connecticut iHealthRecord Adherence Service
Clinical Trial - 100 Patient Study Group vs Control Statins
Antidepressants - 6 Month Results Study is Ongoing
- 2/3 believe that the Adherence messages from
their doctor help them better understand their
medication better manage their condition. - 95 found the Adherence Service easy to use
agree that the service could be an important
part of helping busy doctors provide extra care
and information to patients. - 40 Reduction in medication drop-off (6 Study
Group vs 10.5 Control) based upon initial payor
claims data - The study will continue expand to three
locations move to thousands of patients with
the launch of the iHealthRecord
41Issues with PHR
- Security Privacy
- Health Literacy
- Workflow
- Costs ROI
- Marketing
- Operations
- Passwords Support
- Service Level Expectations
- Patient Entered Data
- Liability
42Patient Control of Information
43Lessons from Early Adopters
- Clinicians
- Physician promotion is key to getting high
consumer adoption in most places. - Physician acceptance requires large up-front
efforts to gain buy-in. - If PHR is viewed as beneficial only to patients,
its hard to get physician support. - PHR is not likely to be incorporated into
clinical workflow without addressing EHR
integration.
44Lessons from Early Adopters
- Patients
- Patient-provider secure messaging, online
refills, lab results, medication lists, disease
management plans are particularly useful. - Patient-provider messaging wins over an
enthusiastic subset of both patients doctors,
does not overwhelm the inbox of doctors. - Patients feel more empowered when they have
access to their office chart information, many
early physician adopters find that helpful. - People with chronic conditions are most likely to
need use PHR-type applications.
45Working Models for Personal Decision Support
- My Chart
- Personal Patient Chart
- Health Data Kept to Oneself
- My Monitoring Home linked to Clinicians
- My Consultations Specialists
- My Health Care Plan
- Insurance Benefits
- Administrative Support to Negotiate System
- Ex
- John Halamka Care Group http//www.patientsite.di
d.harvard.edu - C. Martin Harris Cleveland Clinic
- David Levy PersonalPath
46Patient-centric Web Presence
- Access to Medical Record Personal Health Record
- Patient can annotate the record
- Encrypted, web-based audited communications b/n
doctors and patients - John D. Halamka MD, MS CIO, CareGroup, Harvard -
Patientsite
47The Web-connected Patient
- Clicks Mortar Connectivity b/n Patient
Relevant Health Team - Patient has access 24/7/365
- Rules for Interaction
- Assume 36 hours turnaround for reply
- Doctors team sees record
- Dont e-mail for help with serious acute problems
- Training as needed
48From Patient Satisfaction to Trust
- Replaces many phone calls
- Most questions are reasonable answerable by
nurses or other staff - Patients only rarely abuse system
- Patient need training education to use it
properly - Security Confidentiality manageable
49Requirements for Robust ePHRs
- Citizens
- Health Literacy
- Computer Literacy
- Access to Technology
- System
- IT Infrastructure (e.g., Unique patient
identifier) - Health Care Provider Willingness to Interact w/
patients through ePHRs - Funding Mechanism
50AMIAs gotEHR? Campaign
- Three Areas of Emphasis
- Patients/Public
- Awareness in areas where EHRs being deployed
- Personal Health Records linked to Care
- Policy Makers
- Barriers Regulatory Payment Structures
- Needed Legislation Funding
- Providers
- Qualitative Gains Emphasized
51Why Use It?
- Improve
- Communication
- Patient education
- Patient satisfaction
- Efficiency
- Enable time shifting
- Reduce telephone time costs?
- /- Provide competitive advantage
- Possible new revenue stream
52Policies Safeguards
- Patients staff know follow rules
- E-mail communications
- Part of formal medical record
- Require/deserve secure system
- Use Appropriately
53Patients Must Know Play by the Rules
- Dont use for emergencies
- Expect 48 hour turnaround
- Expect office staff to see possibly respond to
messages - No lengthy messages no tennis games / volleys
- Consider communications confidential part of
your medical record - Accept that NO e-mail system is totally secure
- (/- Additional payments)
- Formally agree to the above
54General Procedures for Staff
- Maintain as a Formal System
- Inform Patient Document Their Acceptance
- Recognize as formal communication with patient
- Confidential
- Part of formal record
- Triage respond with FAQs as appropriate
55Biggest Problems
- Not saved in patients medical record
- Not following procedures
- More likely to be on staff than patient side
- Inappropriate use for type of message
- (Payment)
- (Poor computer skills)
- (Liability risks are low patients like it)
56Efficiency
- 71 MDs spend 5 minutes/msg
- May partially offset phone calls
- Modest volume of messages
- lt 1 per day per 100 pts (BIDMC)
- Only 9.5 patients use it
Source Manhattan Research Taking the Pulse 5.0
57Biggest Assets
- Improved Efficiency
- Reduces telephone tag
- Allows Staff to respond to some calls
58General Issues
- Physician Concerns
- Fear of Liability 72
- Efficiency Concerns 63
- Lack of Payment 58
- No Standards 58
- Source Manhattan Research Taking the Pulse 5.0
59Steps to Use
- Develop or adopt policy
- Select a technology
- Get wired
- Decide how to implement
- Determine office workflow
- Evaluate impact
60Future Evolution
- Full patient access to medical record
- Automated access to hyperlinked
- Medical glossaries
- Supplementary information
- Translation into different languages
- Connectivity to
- Multiple data sources / EHR
- Personal Health Record
- Multimedia educational material
- Data from home-based monitoring
61Conclusions
- Useful for clinical communication
- Appropriate use essential
- Complementary to other forms of communication
- Practical policies important
62N Engl J Med 35017 Apr 22, 2004
63Principles The Patient (/or Caregiver) must be
Central Actively Involved.
- Requires Relevant Knowledge Skills
- Condition(s) How to relate to them
- Access to appropriate Resources
- Self-care
- Assured Communications, Assessment Support
- Requires an Evolving Information Communications
Infrastructure
64 As for the future, your task is not to
foresee, but to enable it.
65Ten by Ten,
- A Beginning
- Train 10,000 health care professionals in applied
health and medical informatics by the year 2010.
- A goal of the American Medical Informatics
Association in partnership with Oregon Health
Science University (OHSU) and other participating
informatics training programs.
66Converting evidence to care
Original research
18
variable
Negative results
Dickersin, 1987
Submission
46
0.5 year
Kumar, 1992
17 years to apply 14 of research knowledge to
patient care!
Koren, 1989
Acceptance
Negative results
0.6 year
Kumar, 1992
Publication
1714
Expert opinion
35
0.3 year
Poyer, 1982
Balas, 1995
Lack of numbers
Bibliographic databases
50
6. 0 - 13.0 years
Antman, 1992
Poynard, 1985
Reviews, guidelines, textbook
9.3 years
Inconsistent indexing
Patient Care
Balas Yearbook Medical Informatics 2000gtre4,
courtesy M Overhage
67On-line Curriculum
- Overview of Discipline and Its History
- Biomedical Computing
- Electronic Health Records and Health Information
Exchange - Decision Support Evolution and Current
Approaches - Standards Privacy, Confidentiality, and Security
- Evidence-Based Medicine and Medical
Decision-Making - Information Retrieval and Digital Libraries
- Bioinformatics
- Imaging Informatics and Telemedicine
- Other Informatics Consumer Health, Public
Health, and Nursing - Organization and Management Issues in Informatics
- Career and Professional Development
On-line modules followed by an intensive
in-person sessions led by experienced leaders in
the field.
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69Elements of Successful ePHR Implementation
- National patient identifiers or defined approach
to authentication - Strong infrastructure (e.g., standards, privacy
framework technical support) - Sound funding strategy
- Buy-in by health care professionals
70Warning Stand-alone ePHRs May Be Insufficient
- The Markle Foundations Connecting for Health
concluded that disease management applications
that encouraged patients to enter very detailed
information pertaining to a single chronic
condition may provide some immediate benefit to
users, but simply offering people a means of
recording information on a daily basis does not
make them better managers of their health or
health care. Without a clinician at the other
end of the application continually providing
advice, making modifications to prescriptions or
otherwise providing them with some ideas to help
better manage their condition these systems were
doomed to fail. - Connecting for Health (Markle Foundation). 2004.
Connecting Americans to their Healthcare. Final
Report of the Working Group on Policies for
Electronic Information Sharing Between Doctors
and Patients. www.connectingforhealth.org.
71If you think education is expensive, try
ignorance.
- - Automobile Bumper Sticker
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74Thank You for Your Hospitality Best Wishes
75Additional References
- Berner ES, Detmer ED, Simborg D.Will the wave
finally break? A brief view of the adoption of
electronic medical records in the United States.
J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2005 January-February12(1)
3-7. - Detmer DE Singleton P Policy for Informed
Patients A European Perspective. Harvard Health
Policy Review, 2004 Spring5(1)81-88. - Yasnoff WA, Humphreys BL, Overhage JM, Detmer DE,
Brennan PF, Morris RW, Middleton B, Bates DW,
Fanning JP.A consensus action agenda for
achieving the national health information
infrastructure.J Am Med Inform Assoc. 2004
Jul-Aug11(4)332-8. - Detmer DE. Building the national health
information infrastructure for personal health,
health care services, public health, and
research.BMC Med Inform Decis Mak. 2003 Jan
063(1)1. - Detmer DE. A new health system and its quality
agenda.Front Health Serv Manage. 2001
Fall18(1)3-30. Erratum in Front Health Serv
Manage 2001 Winter18(2)42. - Detmer DE. Information technology for quality
health care a summary of United Kingdom and
United States experiences.Qual Health Care. 2000
Sep9(3)181-9. - Detmer DE.Your privacy or your health--will
medical privacy legislation stop quality health
care?Int J Qual Health Care. 2000 Feb12(1)1-3
76E-Health An International Perspective
- Don E. Detmer, MD, MA, FACMI
- President CEO
- American Medical Informatics Association
- Professor of Medical Education, University of
Virginia - 1 November 2005
- Dunblane, Scotland