Legal, ethical, and financial dilemmas in electronic health record adoption and use.

Dean F Sittig, Hardeep Singh

University of Texas Memorial Hermann Center for Healthcare Quality and Safety, University of Texas School of Biomedical Informatics at Houston, 6410 Fannin St, UTPB 1100.43, Houston, TX 77030, USA.

Journal Article: PEDIATRICS (impact factor: 4.47). 03/2011; 127(4):e1042-7. DOI: 10.1542/peds.2010-2184

Abstract

Electronic health records (EHRs) facilitate several innovations capable of reforming health care. Despite their promise, many currently unanswered legal, ethical, and financial questions threaten the widespread adoption and use of EHRs. Key legal dilemmas that must be addressed in the near-term pertain to the extent of clinicians' responsibilities for reviewing the entire computer-accessible clinical synopsis from multiple clinicians and institutions, the liabilities posed by overriding clinical decision support warnings and alerts, and mechanisms for clinicians to publically report potential EHR safety issues. Ethical dilemmas that need additional discussion relate to opt-out provisions that exclude patients from electronic record storage, sale of deidentified patient data by EHR vendors, adolescent control of access to their data, and use of electronic data repositories to redesign the nation's health care delivery and payment mechanisms on the basis of statistical analyses. Finally, one overwhelming financial question is who should pay for EHR implementation because most users and current owners of these systems will not receive the majority of benefits. The authors recommend that key stakeholders begin discussing these issues in a national forum. These actions can help identify and prioritize solutions to the key legal, ethical, and financial dilemmas discussed, so that widespread, safe, effective, interoperable EHRs can help transform health care.

Source: PubMed

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Keywords

deidentified patient data
 
electronic data repositories
 
Electronic health records
 
electronic record storage
 
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financial dilemmas
 
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interoperable EHRs
 
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Key legal dilemmas
 
nation's health care delivery
 
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near-term pertain
 
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opt-out provisions
 
overriding clinical decision support warnings
 
overwhelming financial question
 
payment mechanisms
 
statistical analyses
 
unanswered legal