HHS
Releases a New Resource to Help Individuals Access and Use
Their Health Information
The US Department
of Health and Human Services’ Office of the National
Coordinator for Health Information Technology (ONC) today
released the ONC Guide to Getting and Using your Health
Records, a new online resource for
individuals, patients, and caregivers.
This new resource
supports both the 21st Century Cures Act goal of empowering
patients and improving patients’ access to their electronic
health information and the recently announced MyHealthEData initiative .
The new initiative, led by the White House Office of
American Innovation and supported by ONC, empowers patients
by giving them control of their healthcare
information. Other participants in the effort include
the Centers for Medicare & Medicaid Services, National
Institutes of Health, and the Department of Veterans
Affairs.
“It’s important
that patients and their caregivers have access to their own
health information so they can make decisions about their
care and treatments,” said Don Rucker, M.D., national
coordinator for health information technology. “This guide
will help answer some of the questions that patients may
have when asking for their health information.”
Individuals’
ability to access and use their health information
electronically is a measure of interoperability and a
cornerstone of ONC’s efforts to increase patient
engagement, improve health outcomes, and advance
person-centered health.
In fact, a new ONC data brief - PDF
shows that in 2017, half of Americans reported they were
offered access to an online medical record by a provider or
insurer. This is up from 42 percent in 2014. Over half of
individuals who were offered online access viewed their
record with the past year. Eight in 10 of the
individuals who viewed their information rated their online
medical records as both easy to understand and useful for
monitoring their health. These positive perceptions may be
attributed to individuals’ varied use of online medical
records, including viewing test results; managing their
health needs with greater convenience; communicating with
their health care provider; self-management and treatment
decision-making; and contributing information to and
correcting errors in their medical record.
However, challenges
remain. Almost half of Americans in 2017 who were
offered access to an online medical record did not access
their record, frequently citing a perceived lack of need as
one of the reasons for not accessing their record.
Consumers may not understand their right (under the HIPAA
Privacy Rule) to access their health information nor
realize the benefits of accessing their health information.
ONC outlined the challenges patients face in accessing
their health information electronically in a report - PDF released
in June 2017.
“The ONC Guide to
Getting and Using your Health Records” informs patients and
consumers about the value of health information, and
provides individuals with clear, actionable advice on how
to:
·
Get their health record, including offering tips through the
process of accessing their records electronically,
·
Check their health record to make sure it is complete, correct,
and up-to-date, and
·
Use their electronic health
records, such
as sharing their records to better coordinate their care
and using apps and other digital technologies to better
manage and improve their health.
To view the ONC
Guide to Getting, Checking, and Using your Health Records,
visit: HealthIT.gov.
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