Health Information Exchange: What do patients want?

Health Informatics J

Office of Population Health Management, Northwell Health/Hofstra Medical School, USA.

Published: December 2017

AI Article Synopsis

  • - A study involving 982 emergency department patients found that 92.3% were open to sharing their medical records through Health Information Exchange (HIE).
  • - Among those willing to share, 54.3% preferred to sign consent, but 90% would forgo this consent in emergency situations.
  • - Privacy and security concerns were major reasons cited by those reluctant to participate, indicating that better protections could enhance participation; the study suggests considering emergency access to records without prior consent.

Article Abstract

To determine whether emergency department patients want to share their medical records across health systems through Health Information Exchange and if so, whether they prefer to sign consent or share their records automatically, 982 adult patients presenting to an emergency department participated in a questionnaire-based interview. The majority (N = 906; 92.3%) were willing to share their data in a Health Information Exchange. Half (N = 490; 49.9%) reported routinely getting healthcare outside the system and 78.6 percent reported having records in other systems. Of those who were willing to share their data in a Health Information Exchange, 54.3 percent wanted to sign consent but 90 percent of those would waive consent in the case of an emergency. Privacy and security were primary concerns of patients not willing to participate in Health Information Exchange and preferring to sign consent. Improved privacy and security protections could increase participation, and findings support consideration of "break-the-glass" provider access to Health Information Exchange records in an emergent situation.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/1460458216647190DOI Listing

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