Phone as Health Care Credential: Difference between revisions
Jump to navigation
Jump to search
Line 4: | Line 4: | ||
==Context== | ==Context== | ||
The wiki page [[Trustworthy Healthcare Ecosystem]] contains more context information. | *The wiki page [[Trustworthy Healthcare Ecosystem]] contains more context information. | ||
*[https://www.pewtrusts.org/-/media/assets/2018/09/healthit_enhancedpatientmatching_report_final.pdf Pew research report] Enhanced Patient Matching Is Critical to Achieving Full Promise of Digital Health Records, and to prevent harm through faulty health history information. This is defiantly not patient oriented (and that is not a typo.) When they did ask patients what they wanted it was consistently shown that patients want all of the benefit of matching, with none of the downside of loss of privacy. They also found that Republican voters didn't want the government involved at all. | |||
# System oriented solution needs unique patient identifiers - but what they really mean is mandatory patient IDs for life. | |||
# Patient oriented solutions, like [[Smart Phone]]s and QR codes, fit in better with the goal to give patients access and control of their private information, personal as well as medical. | |||
# Demographic matching, bio-metrics, disease history, whatever (maybe even the old standard, the social security number). | |||
# Referential from other sites, like social services agencies or similar. | |||
==Solution== | ==Solution== |
Revision as of 22:50, 30 July 2019
Full Title
Using a Patient's Cell Phone as their Health Care Credential
Context
- The wiki page Trustworthy Healthcare Ecosystem contains more context information.
- Pew research report Enhanced Patient Matching Is Critical to Achieving Full Promise of Digital Health Records, and to prevent harm through faulty health history information. This is defiantly not patient oriented (and that is not a typo.) When they did ask patients what they wanted it was consistently shown that patients want all of the benefit of matching, with none of the downside of loss of privacy. They also found that Republican voters didn't want the government involved at all.
- System oriented solution needs unique patient identifiers - but what they really mean is mandatory patient IDs for life.
- Patient oriented solutions, like Smart Phones and QR codes, fit in better with the goal to give patients access and control of their private information, personal as well as medical.
- Demographic matching, bio-metrics, disease history, whatever (maybe even the old standard, the social security number).
- Referential from other sites, like social services agencies or similar.