Since the launch of the new “blue button” on the Medicare and Veterans Affairs patient Web sites this summer, tens of thousands of patients have downloaded their personal health records to computers, flash drives, and disks – including claims data, test results, and more.
Now, physicians' groups and patients are calling for this practice to be commonplace for all.
“If the patient has access to his or her [personal health] information, they become part of the decision-making process, they are more engaged in their care, and they're empowered to make better decisions,” said Dr. Steven Waldren, director of the American Academy of Family Physicians' Center for Health Information Technology. “The blue button initiative is saying, 'Let's get started.'”
The blue button, developed jointly by Veterans Affairs, the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, and the Defense Department, is “a Web-based feature through which patients may easily download their health information and share it with health care providers, caregivers, and others they trust,” according to Todd Park, chief technology officer at the Health and Human Services department, writing in a post on the White House's Office of Science and Technology blog.
The blue button went live in August on www.mymedicare.govwww.myhealth.va.gov
“This new option will help veterans and Medicare beneficiaries save their information on individual computers and portable storage devices or print that information in hard copy,” Mr. Park wrote. “Having ready access to personal health information from Medicare claims can help beneficiaries understand their medical history and partner more effectively with providers.”
Now, many physicians and physician groups want to see the concept of downloadable personal health records extended to all of their patients.
A policy paper on the topic published by the nonprofit Markle Foundation aims to promote the use of the blue button by calling on “organizations that display personal health information electronically to individuals in Web browsers to include an option for individuals to download the information.”
Additionally, the paper recommended making the download capability a “core procurement requirement for federal- and state-sponsored health [information technology] grants and projects” that come about as a result of the American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009, which allocated billions of dollars for the development of health care technology.
Dr. Waldren was a member of the work group that reviewed the policy paper; he and more than a dozen physicians and other stakeholders endorsed it, including Dr. Jack Lewin, CEO of the American College of Cardiology and Dr. Allan Korn, chief medical officer for the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association.
Patients, too, seem to embrace the concept of downloadable personal health records. In an online survey commissioned by Markle, 70% of almost 1,600 adult respondents agreed that they should be able to download and keep copies of their personal health information.
The real benefit, however, lies in the potential of Internet- and mobile phone–based applications, which can access the data and increase its usefulness for patients and physicians alike.
For example, said Dr. Waldren, imagine a tool that parses through all of a patient's downloaded health data, highlighting all potential and actual medical problems, making lists of all prescribed medications and doses, assessing them for drug-drug interactions, and communicating that information to the physician at every visit.
He went on to say that such a smart “app” also could scan resource Web sites to find new scientific data and government findings that affect patient care. “Those are the things that can start to happen,” with blue button technology.
But despite the myriad possible benefits of downloadable records, privacy remains a concern, for patients and physicians.
According to the Markle Foundation paper, “Any online download capability for personal health information must be provided via secure access. That means the identity of each individual given credentials to access their own data must be proofed to an acceptable level of accuracy, and the individual must present those credentials or some acceptable token of those credentials upon login in order to get access to the data for download.”
Dr. Waldren agreed. “There's no question that privacy and security are real issues,” he said. And that means not only keeping the site secure, but educating patients, too. “Every time the patient clicks on that blue button, they need to be reminded, 'You're doing something that puts your information at risk,'” he said.
But he added that privacy concerns should not be something that keeps technology like the blue button moving forward. “I personally view privacy as a balance between benefit and risk. We could put your records in an encrypted format … that no one could get to. It would be highly secure and I would bet it would never be released inappropriately,” he said. “But it's never available to actually help make sure you get good care.”