More than a year after
Google started developing a service for storing and managing
health records, Cleveland Clinic will be the first test a pre-release version of the service.
From a prototype revealed last year, we could see that Google Health intends to help you make more informed decisions about your health by putting you in control of your health information.
Cleveland Clinic will start to test the service on at least 1,500 patients. "It will test secure exchange of patient medical record data such as prescriptions, conditions and allergies between their Cleveland Clinic PHR to a secure Google profile in a live clinical delivery setting. The ultimate goal of this patient-centered and controlled model is to give patients the ability to interact with multiple physicians, healthcare service providers and pharmacies. (...) The pilot will eventually extend Cleveland Clinic's online patient services to a broader audience while enabling the portability of patient data so patients can take their data with them wherever they go — even outside the Cleveland Clinic Health System."
The big benefits are that health records become
portable, more accessible and more useful, while still being stored securely. Despite the benefits, people might not feel comfortable with storing sensitive data online.
According to
New York Times, Google Health will be publicly available after the pilot ends, in around two months.
Microsoft launched in October 2007 its own health service called
HealthVault that has similar goals with Google's initiative, while partnering with a number of important medical institutions. It's
not the only existing service for managing personal health records online, but their use didn't become widespread, not even in the US.
Update:
Google Blog mentions that Google Health uses
GData and standard medical information formats. "Patients participating in the Cleveland pilot give authorization via our AuthSub interface to have their electronic medical records safely and securely imported into a Google account. (...) Cleveland is just the first of many healthcare providers that will securely send medical records and information via Google APIs at your request. We've been hard at work collaborating with a number of insurance plans, medical groups, pharmacies and hospitals."
Google Blog: A pilot with the Cleveland Clinic for health information access
ReplyDeleteDoes this sound scary to anyone? It does to me. Could Google be made to provide this PRIVATE information to the nefarious gorillas at the NSA?
ReplyDeleteI applaud Google for making this giant step in the right direction towards helping electronic health records. As far as security is concerned, I can think of more security issues that arise from the paper trail. For example, we all hear the stories about trucks transporting medical records whose door fling open and the contents fly out into the streets. Or perhaps what happened to George Clooney when someone broke a HIPAA laws and took a peak into his medical records. Those are some scary stories!
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