Inability to Access Own Medical Records Top Concern

Topic: Rehabilitation and Hospitals
Author: Practice Fusion
Published: 2010/08/17
Contents: Summary - Introduction - Main Item - Related Topics

Synopsis: Survey: Patients Report Inability to Access Own Medical Records as Top Concern.

Introduction

Survey: Patients Report Inability to Access Own Medical Records as Top Concern - Practice Fusion survey reveals patient demand for timely access to personal medical data, highlights potential for participatory medicine and personal health records in coming years.

Main Item

American patients are worried about not being able to access their own medical records when needed, according to a survey conducted by GfK Roper for Practice Fusion, the free, web-based Electronic Health Record (EHR) company. Concern about access outweighed worries about inaccuracy, theft, accidental destruction, ER availability or referral of personal medical records.

"The message is clear: patients want access to their medical records, and they want it now," said Ryan Howard, CEO of Practice Fusion. "Practice Fusion is an early leader in giving doctors and medical practices a simple, free way to share health records with patients in real time. Our innovation gives patients the power to manage their own health."

Top patient medical record worries:

28 percent - I won't be able to access my own records when I need them

19 percent - My records will contain inaccurate or outdated information

16 percent - My records will be stolen or used fraudulently

13 percent - My records will be lost or destroyed by accident

12 percent - My records won't be accessible to an emergency room

12 percent - My records won't carry over to a new doctor

Other survey findings:

Men were more concerned about inaccurate or outdated records than women (22 percent vs. 16 percent).

Concern about record availability in an emergency room increases significantly with age (3 percent for patients aged 18-24 vs. 21 percent for patients aged 65+).

Inability to access medical records remained consistent as the top concern across all patient income levels, genders and regions.

Currently, HIPAA regulation mandates healthcare providers respond to patient requests for protected health information that is maintained or accessible on-site within 30 days. This request can take up to 60 days if such health information is not maintained or accessible on-site and even longer under other circumstances. Patients do not necessarily receive all their records (sometimes it is just a summary) and various state laws restrict what information can be shared. Patients are often charged per-page or per-request fees for access to their records. Physicians who use Practice Fusion's free, web-based EHR system can grant patients real-time online access to their medical records.

Raw results from the patient survey are available upon request. Practice Fusion can also offer physician sources who electronically share records with their patients and health IT experts to discuss the risks and benefits of patient access to their medical data.

Survey methodology - The Practice Fusion survey was conducted via omnibus survey August 6-8, 2010. The GfK Roper OmniWeb survey is a weekly national online survey of US households. Options were displayed in randomized order. Interviews were conducted from among a nationally representative sample of the online population of 1,002 adults age 18 or older.

About Participatory Medicine - Led by patient advocates such as Regina Holliday and e-Patient Dave, the participatory medicine movement promotes the concept of clinical transparency between patients, caregivers and medical providers. Health IT is seen as being a major driver in the shift toward participatory medicine, with EHR and PHR systems eliminating the administrative burden of faxing/copying medical records and allowing patient data to be accessible in real-time online.

About Practice Fusion - Practice Fusion provides a free, web-based Electronic Health Record (EHR) system to physicians. With charting, scheduling, e-prescribing, billing, lab integrations, referrals, unlimited support and a Personal Health Record for patients, Practice Fusion's EHR addresses the complex needs of today's healthcare providers and disrupts the health IT status quo. Practice Fusion is the fastest growing EHR community in the country with more than 43,000 users in 50 states. For more information on Practice Fusion, please visit practicefusion.com.

About GfK Roper OmniBus Services- GfK Roper Omnibus Services deliver top-quality, up-to-the-minute insights enabling companies to stay in the forefront of today's rapidly changing marketplace. Whether phone (OmniTel TM) or online, (OmniWebSM), GfK Omnibus studies are the leading source of affordable and reliable decision support. For more information about GfK Roper Omnibus Services, contact info@gfkamerica or www.gfkamerica.com

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Cite This Page (APA): Practice Fusion. (2010, August 17). Inability to Access Own Medical Records Top Concern. Disabled World. Retrieved October 11, 2024 from www.disabled-world.com/medical/rehabilitation/access-medical-records.php

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