Wednesday, March 4, 2009

Electronic Health Records and Patient Privacy, Medical Identity


Yesterday, an important message titled Don’t Rush eHRs Without Addressing Medical ID Theft was posted on ModernHealthcare.com by Martin Ethridgehill, formerly a provider training specialist with Blue Cross and Blue Shield of New Mexico.


Mr. Ethridgehill points out that if a patient’s electronic medical identity is stolen by someone for health insurance benefits, critical information about the patient can be imperceptibly altered, leading to accidental death in an emergency room for any number of reasons. Furthermore, he points out that even if the real patient is aware that his or her record is tainted by a false patient’s data, it is very difficult to get the comingled record cleared up.

I have also read elsewhere that HIPAA actually impedes resolution of the nightmare because the Rule also protects the privacy of the false patient - prohibiting the real patient from examining his or her own health record.


Reasons to Go Slow


Ethridgehill is particularly critical of the EHR industry which lately has downplayed the importance of patient privacy in order to sell dangerous products. He gives these reasons for the need to slow down in the rush for interoperability:

  • “Adding safety and records mitigation protocols ensures patient safety as an ongoing concept and practice.”
  • “No industry would be allowed to operate, where the officials in charge of it stated that the market or other bodies would be responsible for creating safety procedures. Can you imagine if the auto industry stated, “We make cars, let the market figure out how to regulate safety”? I doubt that Congress or any other body would consider these people as remotely credible, yet I hear time and time again these statements being made in public and private forums by executives, lobbyists, and even so-called healthcare leaders.”
  • “For the public and providers to embrace a product that has no regulation, no built-in safeguards and obviously no importance to safety from the makers of these products, why would Congress expect the American public or healthcare providers to embrace a product or concept that involves the unregulated risk of injury, death, or staggering liability opportunities, let alone without any hope of remedy or proper relief?”

One of the keys to improving life for payors as well as providers and patients will be process innovation. This is accomplished by clearly documenting the existing or "as is" process as well as the "to be" of the desired process. That can only be accomplished with combined disciplines of technicians who know business process modeling (BPM), facilitators who are professionals that can interact with all levels of stakeholders in the health care service chain, and "content" experts who understand legal, medical, and workflow implications of making changes to major functions such as provider management or claims adjudication.


No World Borders has been consulting with several health care payors on process improvement, and preparation of the conversion of systems for electronic health records.

1 comments:

Anonymous said...

Hello: My name is Martin Ethridgehill, and I would like to clear up a misperception circling the internet ----- when the article was posted I had already left BCBSNM as an employee, thus I was a "former" employee, and NOT an "active/current" as has been attributed. My comments were meant to reflect my own insight and deep concerns for patient/practice safety, and NOT the policies of any company. I further hope that by peeling back protective layers, that everyone can benefit from a wider and deeper discourse regarding "best practices" for the healthcare community.