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Health record bank concept gains traction

February 04, 2009 | Patty Enrado, Special Projects Editor

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LACEY, WA – Sometime during the next two months, through grants totaling $1.7 million, the Washington State Health Care Authority, or WSHCA, will launch three consumer-controlled health record bank pilots in the communities of Bellingham, Spokane and Cashmere.

WSHCA's efforts are part of a movement toward implementing health record banking, or HRB, systems, said William Yasnoff, MD, PhD, managing partner of NHII Advisors and founder of the Health Record Banking Alliance.

In October 2007, the Oregon Department of Human Services' Medical Assistance Programs division received a $5.5 million Medicaid Transformation Grant from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, or CMS, to implement a Health Record Bank of Oregon. The Dept. is anticipating an extension of the program through the end of March 2010.

The Louisville Health Information Exchange, or LouHIE, is in the midst of selecting a technology partner to implement its HRB system. Meanwhile, Kentucky announced in mid-January a request for proposal to develop a statewide health information exchange. The RFP stipulates that the statewide health information infrastructure must support HRB, Yasnoff said.

In Kansas City, Mo., CareEntrust is actively signing up consumers in cooperation with its large employer groups, he said. Yasnoff likens CareEntrust, a nonprofit, employer-based organization that creates patient-controlled longitudinal health records stored in a repository for its employers and their members and dependents, as a loosely based HRB entity.

Finally, the Greater Ocala Health Information Trust, or Healthy Ocala, is in the pre-operational stage of developing an integrated community health information system in Florida's Marion County. The system will comprise a health information exchange that links patients' personal health records and physician offices' electronic health records.

HRB systems around the country are off and running, and with President Obama's commitment for all Americans to have electronic health records, HRBs stand to play an important role in reaching that goal, Yasnoff said. "This is exciting and a very reasonable goal," he said. "You do have to spend money to do it and government has a role to improve privacy and regulate health record banks."

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  • bank
  • Bank of Oregon
  • banking
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  • Medicare
  • NHII
  • Oregon
  • William Yasnoff

Reader Comments (1)Login to Post a Comment

eHealthPro says: Theory vs Real World - EMR vs PHR
February 08, 2009 | 4:34AM GMT

Odd how a program that doesn't need government help has to get government grants to be started? We live in the age of the net so I am not sure why a model based on banking mainframes would be the way to go? Besides when over 80% of doctors don't have the most basic ERM's why would a anyone spend Health IT money to implement what amount to regional Personnal Health Records when you can get them for free online? What you need is the ability to capture clinical data (EMR's vs PHR's).

It looks like Yasnoff makes his living selling this concept? It sounds like he has gotten some traction but the market has moved past him in the past 10 years and the reality is that a personal health record is useless without clinical information to populate it. According to the Washington State web site it looks like all 3 of the grants went to people or organizations who served on the advisory board that came up with the banking concept? Wow isn't that the exact same type of insider relationships that brought HHS appointee Daschele down?

Does it make sense for patients to control their data? of course but it doesn't make sense for people to enter it themselves. Perhaps back when we relied on mainframe computers we would need a model like this but with interoperability and data liquidity there really isn't any reason to be spending tax money to try and get people to sign up for personal health records when their doctors don't have the ability to capture or give them the data. Start with e-prescribing that has a feedback loop so doc's can tell when an RX has been filled, add in lab results, let patients see them online like at Kaiser. With web technology you really don't need a centralized bank.

It is like asking us to enter all of our checking account transactions into the banks web site. Then again if I lived in the same state as Microsoft (one of the partners to the program) I might advocate for it as well. We have moved past the time when people believed that consumers would rise up and transform the system and realized that the resources are needed by the people who make the purchasing decisions. The providers.

If you want an economist to run the economy why not have someone who has never implemented a single HIT program design a state wide health information system? I don't know a single physician that would trust data that was controlled by the patients but it would be a nice supplement to include some patient information. What do they say. 30 seconds for a doc to cut a patient off when talking? I am sure they will read the PHR during the 8 minute average visit.

It sounds like this model won't need any of the stimulus money though so that is a relief. We need to focus on clinical data first. If people want to supplement it with their own PHR great but I don't use one do you? Do you know anyone in health IT who actively uses a PHR? (vs a portal to an EMR) Perhaps we will end up with the UPS vs USPS model. High cost high value banking service models next to efficient low cost IT exchange model

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