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	<title>apractis.com Blog &#187; Personal Health Records</title>
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		<title>Is there really some shared concept of a Personal Health Record?</title>
		<link>http://apractis.com/blog/2008/02/22/what-is-the-real-culture-change-for-personal-health-records/</link>
		<comments>http://apractis.com/blog/2008/02/22/what-is-the-real-culture-change-for-personal-health-records/#comments</comments>
		<pubDate>Fri, 22 Feb 2008 02:15:10 +0000</pubDate>
		<dc:creator>abarbashmd</dc:creator>
				<category><![CDATA[Healthcare Issues]]></category>
		<category><![CDATA[Personal Health Records]]></category>

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		<description><![CDATA[The healthcare industry keeps talking as though the average consumer even views their own information in a manner that results in a thing called a Personal Health Record. That is an artifice of an industry that also thinks that the doctors want an electronic medical record-as opposed to having more digitized information how/when/where it is [...]]]></description>
			<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The healthcare industry keeps talking as though the average consumer even views their own information in a manner that results in a thing called a Personal Health Record. That is an artifice of an industry that also thinks that the doctors want an electronic medical record-as opposed to having more digitized information how/when/where it is most useful. If we ask people what they want they will likely focus more on the result and the workflow efficiency. I would submit that people are already doing some of and will do more of what they &#8220;want and perceive they need to do&#8221; than what some depersonalized process tells them they &#8220;ought to do&#8221;  And the confusion about what a EMR, EHR, PHR even are&#8211;since it really depends on the context&#8211;makes this even harder.</p>
<p>What people want is something like this</p>
<p>Not have a big chance of getting a medication that wont help or will give them inconvenient side effects</p>
<p>Not have to worry that someone will advise them and neither will have time to figure out that they are likely to have an allergic reaction to something</p>
<p>Not have to repeat tests that have risks</p>
<p>Not have to waste time filling out the same information every time they do something different in healthcare</p>
<p>Be able to get an answer to a personal question from someone that they trust, know, or can rely on</p>
<p>Not waste time getting to an answer</p>
<p>Have doctors and nurses spend the right amount of time with them when needed</p>
<p>Communicate with the healthcare industry in a way that they want, when and how they want. just like other industries</p>
<p>Whether keeping a personal health record is a primary goal or a &#8220;default&#8221; objective because there is no more realistic way to achieve all this, and whether their keeping personal records in the absence of the industry believing that a PHR is the PRIMARY  source of core information, not an offshoot, is a serious question to ask if we are to understand why this &#8220;no brainer&#8221; is not a more ubiquitous reality. But there is not much question that figuring out how to achieve this in a pragmatic, non intrusive, non-technology centric model is a laudable objective. I have always believed that we should be thinking of this as a technology facilitated &#8220;service&#8221;, not a thing in itself. <em><strong>And if we dont start getting the message across that this is something an individual can expect to &#8220;Do work on&#8221; and &#8220;Pay for the sanity of having&#8221; we wont get there</strong></em></p>
<p>I have met the people from <a href="http://www.vitalkey.com">VitalKey</a>, for example, and that is a centralized supported workflow process that acknowledges the idea of a PHR is a dynamic ongoing process rather than a &#8220;thing&#8221; There are other models, and technologies. Alot of the industry, as with the EMR industry is still a population based research project in my view!</p>
<p>More later, just some thoughts</p>
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