Mark Hamalaien outlines what he’d like to see in Healthcare 3.0
What do you want to see that he hasn’t covered?
Mark Hamalaien outlines what he’d like to see in Healthcare 3.0
What do you want to see that he hasn’t covered?
@RapAdmin he wants a lot. I can’t get this level of service from my car mechanic. But it would be nice. I’m betting privacy issues will keep this a bay for a long time.
@Joseph_Lavelle you need to stop going to your car mechanic for healthcare advice.
As an aside, a recent study using AI in the ER failed miserably.
My highest priority from a practitioner standpoint is his first point of all data in one place. Health records are currently remarkably difficult to see as each healthcare facility has its own private data. Of course there is a loss of privacy downside to this.
It’s a great idea to have all personal medical records stored in one place. I lost trust in big companies to store my records bc they constantly leak it. I would want to carry it on a flash drive on my key chain: if I’m in any medical emergency citation any med facility could have a quick access to it all.
I would like to see all health care providers adopt something similar to the VA/DoD Blue Button format. It is a standardized format for all your history, labs, records that can easily be read and analyzed by different providers.
I’m in the energy industry and we adopted the format to store and transmit your home energy data (green button).
Realize that if by “providers”, you’re talking about physicians and mid levels, we have zero input into health records formats. The decision is made by administrators and is based on financial aspects of the records. There is no concern about usability.
Yes - just to add to @KarlT 's perspective - the EMR (Electronic Medical Records) are an oligopoly where a few companies have significant “lock-in” with the hospital companies. The databases have minimal interoperability so once a hospital has a given vendor’s product its virtually impossible to change… its the ultimate example of a dinosaur industry, really. This was discussed in this thread: What is the best way to combine all one's electronic medical records (EMRs) with testing/lab data from independent providers like TruDiagnostic?