Personal Health Records For Integrated Resource Allocation In An Emergency Department, Pharmacy, And Lab

Authors

  • Saeed Yahya Saeed Alhaek
  • Raghda Khalid Alhumaid
  • Salem Mohammed Ali Al Dighrir
  • Mahdi Hussain Al Khudaysh
  • Jamal Ali Al Dighrir
  • Nader Qahhat Mohammed Al Qahhat
  • Ali Nasser Hassan Al Dighrir
  • Faris Mahdi Salem Aldighrir
  • Saleh Dafer Talep Hefshan

Abstract

Background: Integrated personal health records (PHRs) offer significant potential to stimulate transformational changes in health care delivery and self-care by patients. In 2006, an invitational roundtable sponsored by Kaiser Permanente Institute, the American Medical Informatics Association, and the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality was held to identify the transformative potential of PHRs, as well as barriers to realizing this potential and a framework for action to move them closer to the health care mainstream. This paper highlights and builds on the insights shared during the roundtable.

Discussion: While there is a spectrum of dominant PHR models, (standalone, tethered, integrated), the authors state that only the integrated model has true transformative potential to strengthen consumers' ability to manage their own health care. Integrated PHRs improve the quality, completeness, depth, and accessibility of health information provided by patients; enable facile communication between patients and providers; provide access to health knowledge for patients; ensure portability of medical records and other personal health information; and incorporate auto-population of content. Numerous factors i[1]mpede widespread adoption of integrated PHRs: obstacles in the health care system/culture; issues of consumer confidence and trust; lack of technical standards for interoperability; lack of HIT infrastructure; the digital divide; uncertain value realization/ROI; and uncertain market demand. Recent efforts have led to progress on standards for integrated PHRs, and government agencies and private companies are offering different models to consumers, but substantial obstacles remain to be addressed. Immediate steps to advance integrated PHRs should include sharing existing knowledge and expanding knowledge about them, building on existing efforts, and continuing dialogue among public and private sector stakeholders.

Summary: Integrated PHRs promote active, ongoing patient collaboration in care delivery and decision making. With some exceptions, however, the integrated PHR model is still a theoretical framework for consumer-centric health care. The authors pose questions that need to be answered so that the field can move forward to realize the potential of integrated PHRs. How can integrated PHRs be moved from concept to practical application? Would a coordinating body expedite this progress? How can existing initiatives and policy levers serve as catalysts to advance integrated PHRs?

Background

Personal health records (PHRs) are consumer-centric tools that can strengthen consumers' ability to actively manage their own health and health care [1]. Although the capabilities of PHRs vary significantly in the current marketplace, they typically include provisions to capture information about an individual's diagnoses, medica- tions, allergies, lab test results, immunization records, and other personal health information. Many PHRs also pro- vide linkages to convenience tools (e.g., requesting appointments, requesting prescription renewals, asking billing questions) and communication tools to assist the patient in connecting with various health care profession- als (e.g., physicians, nurses, pharmacists [2-5].

Metrics

Metrics Loading ...

Downloads

Published

2022-06-15

How to Cite

Alhaek, S. Y. S. ., Alhumaid, R. K. ., Dighrir, S. M. A. A. ., Khudaysh, M. H. A. ., Dighrir, J. A. A. ., Al Qahhat, N. Q. M. ., Al Dighrir, A. N. H. ., Aldighrir, F. M. S. ., & Hefshan, S. D. T. . (2022). Personal Health Records For Integrated Resource Allocation In An Emergency Department, Pharmacy, And Lab. Migration Letters, 19(S5), 58–80. Retrieved from https://migrationletters.com/index.php/ml/article/view/9651

Issue

Section

Articles