Electronic medical records systems work, but not together
Why, then, does a windowless office in
Why do scanners at a regional center run by medical giant
The page-reading repeats itself constantly at doctors offices, clinics and hospitals across the country -- nearly every sheet a testament to how bureaucracy can defeat technology.
All that scanning springs from institutional rivalries over control of your medical data. Records emerging from all that scanning give your doctor the digital age version of something pieced together with duct tape -- and rendered less valuable in the process.
"It's a triumph of marketing over health care," said
Electronic medical records at
Typically, the pages start out as electronic medical records. But hospitals, clinics and doctors offices don't all share them in digital form.
That's why quasi-public outfits emerged to channel the information from competing systems to the clinicians who need them. Those health information exchanges share medical records to caregivers with promises that they won't be sold to researchers, marketers or drug companies.
But those different groups often can't agree to share the documents with one another in the most functional, electronic form. The organizations may work on different security rules for control of the data or disagree on whether records should move between clinics by default or only when a patient opts in.
So instead of a few keyboard taps, offices might need to exchange phone calls and emails. Then the records must be printed out. Maybe the patient carries them from one clinic to the next. Or they're put in the mail, or faxed. Next, they must be fed into scanners, which occasionally skip a page.
"It takes work to get over the technological problems ... but you can do it," said
Sometimes the exchanges do play nice with one another. In
For now, that's produced digital dead-ends that force the conversion of dynamic electronic documents to less valuable paper ones.
Imagine you're the patient of a doctor in the massive HCA system. Get referred to an HCA specialist or hospital, and a potentially life-saving medical record follows you seamlessly -- always available in its richest form to your latest caregiver.
But go from there to a St. Luke's hospital -- that system participates in the Midwest Health Connection exchange -- and the scanners start humming. Move on to Truman, a member of the Lewis and Clark Information Exchange, and the print-fax-scan process cranks up yet again.
"Competing (health information exchanges) is pathological," Koppel said. "They were created precisely to fix a problem that shouldn't exist in the first place."
A better record
When a doctor looks at the snazzy, functional electronic medical record kept on you by his or her institution, everything is just clicks away. But to see what came from a competing health exchange, the physician often must refer to the clunky results of all that scanning. It's like toggling between a Google search and a stack of old notebooks.
The scanned records are cumbersome to read. None of the data fills into the forms created to make use of digital record keeping. Those sections can't be easily updated.
Few in the medical industry dispute the transformational promise of electronic medical records. They could spare you from a lethal dose of an allergy-triggering drug. They might avoid orders for duplicate tests and procedures that cost the country hundreds of billions a year. And they offer great data collections that make researchers salivate.
Already,
"It's the future," said
That promise of better medicine helped drive the federal government -- motivated partly to kick-start an imploding economy -- in 2009 to begin giving the medical industry nearly
All that spending proved a boon to
The medical industry was widely seen as slow to enter the digital age -- partly because of the expense, and partly because of the complexity and high stakes of medical care.
That prompted
But the
In a report last year, the GAO criticized the
"We didn't start out the system with interoperability," said
"My hospital is better and safer now that it is wired, even if it didn't communicate to other institutions," he said.
Data control
Consider where
That same health exchange had also signed other big names in the market, such as the
"LACIE was more mature at the time," she said.
Meantime, the Missouri Health Connection, yet another exchange, had been growing with a strong foothold in the
LACIE and MHC have had talks but can't come to terms on a data-sharing deal. LACIE wants to team with MHC as an equal player.
"We have offered to connect with them many times," said
MHC argues the state would be better off if health information organizations in the state such as LACIE became participants within one all-encompassing MHC network.
"Our participants all agree to work by the same rules of the road," said
The Kansas Health Information Network shares records with LACIE and expects to share soon with MHC. But the organization's executive director,
But "the biggest challenge is trusting another organization to use the data in a way that's approved by your doctors and hospitals," she said. "This data is worth a lot of money ... to pharmaceuticals, to
While the exchanges have a mixed record of cooperating, one large medical network belongs to none. HCA is building an internal network, as its regional chief information officer said, to "focus first and foremost on our own institution."
Besides, HCA's chief information officer
To reach Scott Canon, call 816-234-4754 or send email to [email protected]. Twitter: @ScottCanon.
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