|
Technology has already transformed the way you do
business. Now it may change the way you manage your health.
Imagine a day when all of your medical history is digitized,
available to you at a moment’s notice from your laptop or
cell phone. You could track your own blood pressure, blood
sugar and cholesterol—a great motivator to stick to your
diet and exercise plan. You could set up e-mail reminders
that would prompt you to get your annual check-up and refill
your prescriptions.
Imagine that you receive a phone call from your elderly
mother, who has a question about one of her medications.
Because you have been given authorization by your mother to
view her health records, you are able to check on the
prescription in question. You also see that it is time she
visited her cardiologist. You go online to schedule an
appointment with your mother’s doctor, and at the moment you
set up the appointment, your mother’s insurance company
automatically receives a notice to start the referral
paperwork.
Digitizing personal health records, and making all of
that information available to everyone authorized by the
patient to see it, has the potential to reduce health care
costs, improve patient outcomes and give ordinary people
more control over their own personal health management.
Digital records could link everything in the world of
personal health care, from the medical to the financial.
The federal government agrees. In 2004, the federal
government mandated that by 2014, most Americans must have
an electronic health record. What kind of technologies will
make digital health records not just possible, but readily
accepted and easy-to-use? What are the other opportunities
that information technology offers for improving patient
safety and quality of health care, while at the same time
reducing costs?
The Smith School’s Center for Health Information and
Decision Systems (CHIDS) is at the very forefront of
exploring the business phenomena and structural barriers
associated with health IT. CHIDS is the first research
center to address health informatics issues from a broad
business perspective, rather than just a policy or patient
care perspective.
“There are a whole range of technological issues that
have to do with interoperability, sharing information across
organizational boundaries, creating databases and data
structures to store the information, and information
security. But there are also organizational and behavioral
issues surrounding the adoption of this technology and
incorporating it into an existing workflow. There are
economic issues to consider as well: how much to invest in
this, and what is the return on the investment,” says Ritu
Agarwal, Robert H. Smith Dean’s Chair of Information
Systems, and director of the center.
“The barriers to technology adoption that exist in every
other industry also exist in health care, but with another
layer of complexity, especially as it concerns patient
privacy and the lack of a single standard that could make
this interchange happen,” adds Corey Angst, PhD ’07, the
center’s associate director.
A team of graduate and undergraduate students works with
Agarwal, Angst and other Smith School faculty on research
projects ranging from the investigation of mobile computing
in hospitals to legislation related to health IT and its
impact on the health care industry. CHIDS has researched the
adoption and diffusion of digital medical records, the
business value of health IT, the effect of technology on
workflows in hospitals, optimizing various operations in
health facilities such as the allocation of beds, and the
readiness of physician’s practices to adopt electronic
medical records. The center circulates quarterly briefs
describing their research results,
which can be viewed
online.
As well as producing cutting-edge research, CHIDS is also
actively working with federal and regional health agencies
to drive policy decisions about health care technologies.
Agarwal and Angst have given expert testimony to the
Department of Health and Human Services’ National Committee
on Vital and Health Statistics (NCVHS), the American Health
Information Community (AHIC) Consumer Empowerment Workgroup,
the Office of the National Coordinator for Health IT, the
Markle Foundation’s Connecting Americans initiative, and
many others.
Incorporating information technology into the delivery
and management of health is more than an academic issue: it
has life and death implications. This technology has the
potential to reduce, if not entirely eliminate, many
unnecessary deaths each year. “According to an Institute of
Medicine report in 1999, almost 100,000 people die every
year as a result of medical errors that could have been
prevented. If we have a complete medical record that goes
with us, anyone who treats us will know all of our
information, which could cut down many of those medical
errors,” says Angst. He also points to the cost benefits
that digitized records will make possible. “If we could just
reduce duplicate tests by making information available to
multiple entities involved in treating a patient, we could
significantly improve efficiencies within the system.”
Support for CHIDS comes from a wide range of industry
stakeholders, from pharmaceutical companies such as
Johnson&Johnson and Pfizer, to insurance providers, to IT
vendors and others. The center recently received a planning
grant from the National Science Foundation (NSF) and a
subcontract from the Department of Health and Human
Services’ Assistant Secretary for Planning and Evaluation (ASPE).
Learn more about CHIDS
► |