This is a very nice interview of Jeremiah Owyang and Ray Wang from Altimeter Group, by Robert Scoble (now of Rackspace). I am a big fan of all. They cover all the information in social media that I’m interested in. (Is RSS reading really dead?)
OpenNotes Project – Robert Wood Johnson Foundation funded study on allowing patients to read physician notes.
There’s a nice 4-minute video on the home page discussing issues related to sharing medical records with their patients. Tom Delbanco, MD also was on a n IHI podcast regarding this project recently, it’s worth a listen. The podcast was great; Tom made a comment, though, about Group Health Cooperative’s electronic After Visit Summary that was incorrect. It’s a good lesson to all of us that if you mention another organization that you are not affiliated with in an interview and what they are doing or not doing, we should double check our facts
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Always remember the feeling of excitement that comes with acceptance.
Speaking of giving patients access to their medical records, this week’s photograph is both a little grainy, and not taken in Washington, DC. This one comes from an iPhone and San Francisco, California, and is of an advertisement for Virgin America airlines, on Market Street.
I sort of follow (and fly) Virgin America because they have done a great job of meeting the expectations of customers in ways that other airlines have seemed unable/resistant to. Any customer would have expected or desired a power outlet at every seat 5 or 10 years ago.
As usual, there are a lot of analogies to health care. Patients and their families are a force of nature. They have high expectations of us, just as we do of them. Let’s make sure we meet theirs, because we can.
I’m not that smart and my ideas are not that unique.
This is why I enjoy writing the posts that are tagged “where we came from” on this blog.
The title of this one comes from a 1991 article published in the British Medical Journal about the idea of providing patients access to their complete medical record. To really dig deep, though, I wanted to grab the seminal 1973 article from The New England Journal of Medicine on this topic, and thanks to the Internet, I found it.
In Sounding board. Giving the patient his medical record: a proposal to improve the system (There appears to be a PDF of this article on the Internet here), authors Shenkin and Warner lay out some facts about the health system that don’t seem to different than those of today, sadly:
Dissatisfaction with the functioning of the medical care-system has become widespread. Four serious problems are maintaining high quality of care, establishing mutually satisfactory physician-patient relations, ensuring continuity and avoiding excessive bureaucracy.
Some differences were apparent in 1973, such as the fact that in 41 states, patients could only obtain their medical records through litigation (!). Also, it appears with the emergence of “centralized organization” though things like health maintenance organizations, that physician autonomy was under siege. The health system was considered at the time to be “decentralized to the penultimate step – the physician” and the fear was that their autonomy was “unchecked.”
All of that aside, the authors, quite visionary in my opinion, laid out an almost Web 2.0 version of the medical world.
They talked about the idea of “decentralized medical review.” A few quotes:
The freely available record would provide a more “longitudinal” view of a patient, and physicians would appreciate better (and treat better) the course of a disease. Since innovation proceeds mainly by the contagion effect, new knowledge would probably be put into practice more swiftly.
And this one
Decentralized peer review would provide recognition of excellence in the practice of medicine, and hence enhance the prestige of being a practicing physician. Patient records and the care that they reflected would become a source of pride open to the perusal of fellow professionals. The expected improvement in continuity would decrease frustrations, and improved physician-patient relations would add importantly to physician satisfaction.
Whoa. They are talking wisdom of crowds, viral innovation, and building trust through transparency. In 1973.
Flash forward to 1991. In The Right to Know, author McLaren discusses data from Denmark, which provided patients “statutory rights” to their entire hospital record, with no ill effects. He concludes:
The argument against giving patients greater access to their records has been lost; the challenge now is to get doctors skilled in writing records that their patients will find useful.
Whoa. He’s talking Meaningful Use.
1973 was before my medical time, but 1991 wasn’t. In 1991 I was in medical school, and I’m pretty sure if you asked me, “Ted, should your patients see what you wrote about them in that manila folder thing with paper?” I would have said, “Why shouldn’t they?”
Ironically, it’s probably the very group that opposed these viewpoints that are responsible for creating mine. Summer of 1991 was my first (and I think just one of 2) trips to the national meeting of the American Medical Association, in Chicago. That meeting was marked by protests from the HIV/AIDS community on the outside. And on the inside, after a week, I remember leaving with the thoughts, “I met a lot of great peers here, but who are these leaders who are resistant to technology and only allow heterosexual men to participate?* They aren’t me. And I’m not them.” This is the heritage of Generation X – we were groomed to be on the side of the patients.
So that’s my story, and the story of where we came from with regard to sharing medical records with patients. Has nothing happened in 18 years? Absolutely not.
In the Shenkin article, it was proposed that a law be passed to require that a “complete and unexpurgated copy of all medical records, both inpatient and outpatient, be issued routinely and automatically to patients as soon as the services provided are received.” They do a great job of covering every known objection, “firstly” through “ninthly.”
My favorite is of the fear of “poor quality review” by peers and patients. They said that in 1973, it is “safer for them (physicians) to measure adequacy by academic degrees achieved than by competence demonstrated.”
The great thing I have learned pretty solidly from so many people by 2009 is that the medical community has so much support from patients and families – they want them to be great, they will only help. One patient said this at a recent continuing education course to room of us: “Can I just say thank you for paying attention in medical school, you are in my thoughts, you have my full gratitude.”
Let’s please remember these words to keep the conversation about ending secrecy an easy one, not a hard one. And, carry these two articles in our back pockets at all times.
*The American Medical Association has since reversed its stance on discriminating against gay, lesbian, bisexual, and transgender physicians and patients.
A few pieces of good news:
Kaiser Permanente is in the Top 50 U.S. places to work. It’s at #38, Apple Computer is #22. Not bad. Both Kaiser Permanente and Apple Computer also are on the list of employers that score a perfect 100% on the corporate equality index.
Washington, DC is joining the ranks of communities that provides equality to its residents, in the DC Council action yesterday to provide equality in marriage, expected to be signed by law by the Mayor, and not expected to be blocked by Congress.
In encouraging a colleague to blog the other day, I was asked, “How much of your personal life do you include in your blog?”
My answer to this is that I post things that are relevant to the three major things that are part of my professional existence:
So this information counts as bloggable. A great employer and a diverse community are good for health and happiness. Enjoy, and congratulations to Kaiser Permanente and the District of Columbia. I’m glad I know you.
What a challenging conversation this can be.
Kudos and sincere thanks to the National Partnership for Women and Families and its hosted Consumer Partnership for eHealth for hosting the discussion entitled ““How Access to Information Can Empower Patients and their Caregivers” yesterday. It was the right place, right time, right group of people. I think we nearly split the atom.
e-Patient Dave in his post on e-patients.net did a nice job of summarizing the feeling on the part of the patients in the room, so I’ll just post what was going through my mind here.
After showing the images that I previously posted on this blog (you can see them here), a question was asked about sharing of lab results, imaging results, physician notes, and the like.
As you can see from Dave’s review of things, there appeared to be a difference of opinion about “when.”
The problem I see with the response of “yes, they should have their results; however…” or “yes they should see their data, but…” is that it reminds me of so many conversations I have had that go something like this:
“Ted, minorities (such as yourself) should have equal rights, no question about that. Just not now.”
That’s the reality I have lived, and I think for someone who is struggling to be respected in our health care system, this is how responses like the above can come across, as Dave’s blog post shows. This is why I turned to Dave and Regina and asked them to provide their personal experience, which they did, and very passionately so.
Instead of wondering,”Should the doctor see the results first?” let’s ask a deeper question: “When can patients have their data?” And…in more and more health systems, the answer is “whenever they want it,” with off-the-charts satisfaction on the part of patients and clinicians.
Yesterday really helped me understand that this is not going to be an easy conversation, however, I’m happy to participate in it, and invite the patient to be in the room while it is happening.
Why? Because I may have gone to medical school, but I have not yet had stage 4 metastatic renal carcinoma or cared for someone who has.
A Breath of Fresh Air for Health Care – Opinionator Blog – NYTimes.com – Nice article about Kaiser Permanente’s work to create the Total Health Environment. I have seen this up close in several facilities I have been to and I think it shows a great commitment to managing the environment where health care is provided. When an organization doesn’t pay attention to the environment within its walls, how can it pay attention to the one outside of its walls?
I also would like to note that in these spaces, Kaiser Permanente purchases and displays art from local artists in the communities that it serves. Here’s a piece from the Colorado Springs Medical Office:
I am giving the attached presentation at the Consumer Partnership for eHealth meeting today, in Washington, DC. It has the latest use statistics for Kaiser Permanente’s My Health Manager, which reports quarterly. Enjoy.
Hope Leman, who just did a wonderful job interviewing me on her blog, also asked me about this quote in a previous post:
“Not only do we now have information that this rule (”doctor sees results first”) is probably harmful, we are learning that it’s probably not wanted, from physicians, who are talking to patients.”
She asked me to clarify, which I am happy to do. Below is a graphical image of what two very important studies just showed:
Hope’s question:
I don’t see how that would be harmful. Do you mean because he would then be overly persuasive and the patient would be a weaker position info possession wise?
To clarify, I did not mean that it’s harmful for doctors to see test results before their patients. Not at all. I think if a physician seeing a result and then informing the patient in a timely manner is ideal. I also think the patient seeing the result and then having a dialogue with the patient is ideal, too, relative to what is not ideal.
What is not ideal is a significantly abnormal result coming back and the patient not finding out about it, for obvious reasons.
So what I meant was, “a workflow that doesn’t allow a patient to see their test results in a timely manner is harmful.” When a system requires the doctor to see the result before the patient can, there’s a risk that the patient will never get it. When there is failure to notify, there could be failure to treat, which can be devastating.
Beyond this risk, patients and families are not demanding that their doctors see their test results first anyway, so this is just another reason to change the rule “patient doesn’t get to see their test results until the doctor does.”
The key is patient (and family) access to their own results, so they can assist in the accuracy and safety of their care. And they will do it, as I quoted previously, from the Disruptive Women in Health Care blog:
Although we may not think it’s our responsibility to read our operative report or a pathology report… it could mean the difference between a good or bad result in the best case scenario, or life and death in the worst case scenario. In the end, your health information is just that…..yours. No one will care more about it, or own it, in quite the same way as you.
I hope this explanation was better; if not, comment away!