domingo, 28 de agosto de 2011

Personal Health Record (PHR)

An electronic record of health-related information on an individual that conforms to nationally recognized interoperability standards and that can be drawn from multiple sources while being managed, shared, and controlled by the individual understanding a PHRU

The most salient feature of the PHR, and the one that distinguishes it from the EMR and EHR, is that the information it contains is under the control of the individual. The concise definition above names the individual as the source of control, but that leaves room for others acting in the individual’s interest—their agent or agents—to have control over access to the PHR. An agent may be expressly designated by the individual but not in all cases; examples of an agent acting for an individual include parents acting for children, or, in the later stages of life, children acting for parents.

Exercising control. The individual is distinctively the guardian of information stored or accessible within a PHR. Similar to the role of a librarian, a person managing a PHR decides what volumes of information to include, how they are maintained and ordered, and who can read them or “check them out.” Standards and policy will need to determine if and how individuals can delete or modify information in a PHR that originated from an EHR and how these modifications are communicated to other providers with whom the data in the PHR are shared.
Portability. Having control also means that an individual’s PHR can exist independently of the entity that sponsors it—the PHR is portable. This requirement for portability excludes models in which sponsors such as health insurers or health care providers give individuals access to health-related information that is dependent on the individual remaining with that sponsor.



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