scholarly journals De-identification of free-text medical records in health information exchange

Author(s):  
Tian-shu Zhou ◽  
Peng-fei Li ◽  
Jing-song Li
2016 ◽  
Vol 23 (4) ◽  
pp. 268-278 ◽  
Author(s):  
Laura N Medford-Davis ◽  
Lawrence Chang ◽  
Karin V Rhodes

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.


Author(s):  
Rano Indradi Sudra

The issuance of Regulation of the Minister of Health number 21 of 2020 concerning the Strategic Plan of the Ministry of Health year 2020-2024 encourages the need for appropriate implementation measures. One of the things that was proclaimed to be realized in 2024 is the application of integrated electronic medical records (RME) reached 100%. This is intended to be able to support the exchange of medical resume data between hospitals (health information exchange / HIE). To implement this HIE requires standardization and regulation that regulates it. This research is qualitative, using a sosiolegal approach that focuses on the depth of material related to documenting standards in medical resumes enriched with literature studies. Regulations related to medical resumes / discharge summaries that exist at this time have not set about language standards, abbreviations, symbols, and units for documenting in medical resumes. The existing regulations also have not explained the dictionary related matters ...  


2021 ◽  
Vol 28 (1) ◽  
pp. e100241
Author(s):  
Job Nyangena ◽  
Rohini Rajgopal ◽  
Elizabeth Adhiambo Ombech ◽  
Enock Oloo ◽  
Humphrey Luchetu ◽  
...  

BackgroundThe use of digital technology in healthcare promises to improve quality of care and reduce costs over time. This promise will be difficult to attain without interoperability: facilitating seamless health information exchange between the deployed digital health information systems (HIS).ObjectiveTo determine the maturity readiness of the interoperability capacity of Kenya’s HIS.MethodsWe used the HIS Interoperability Maturity Toolkit, developed by MEASURE Evaluation and the Health Data Collaborative’s Digital Health and Interoperability Working Group. The assessment was undertaken by eHealth stakeholder representatives primarily from the Ministry of Health’s Digital Health Technical Working Group. The toolkit focused on three major domains: leadership and governance, human resources and technology.ResultsMost domains are at the lowest two levels of maturity: nascent or emerging. At the nascent level, HIS activities happen by chance or represent isolated, ad hoc efforts. An emerging maturity level characterises a system with defined HIS processes and structures. However, such processes are not systematically documented and lack ongoing monitoring mechanisms.ConclusionNone of the domains had a maturity level greater than level 2 (emerging). The subdomains of governance structures for HIS, defined national enterprise architecture for HIS, defined technical standards for data exchange, nationwide communication network infrastructure, and capacity for operations and maintenance of hardware attained higher maturity levels. These findings are similar to those from interoperability maturity assessments done in Ghana and Uganda.


2014 ◽  
Vol 33 (9) ◽  
pp. 1672-1679 ◽  
Author(s):  
Michael F. Furukawa ◽  
Jennifer King ◽  
Vaishali Patel ◽  
Chun-Ju Hsiao ◽  
Julia Adler-Milstein ◽  
...  

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