boston.com Your Life your connection to The Boston Globe
HEALTH SENSE

Privacy issues loom in push for electronic medical records

Patients of the land, unite! You have nothing to lose but your privacy.

There's a growing national effort to bring medical records into the 21st century by converting the paper records now scattered in doctors' file cabinets to electronic records by 2014. It's a grand idea -- in many ways.

If medical records were electronic, prescriptions would be more legible and could be filled more accurately. Public health officials could spot disease outbreaks quickly and track their spread. Doctors could speedily check a patient's record, helping to avoid wasteful repetition of tests and minimize harmful drug interactions and other errors, which currently kill an estimated 98,000 people a year in the United States. Scientists would have access to a gold mine of data about diseases.

There could be other direct benefits, too. If I had a car accident in San Francisco, say, an emergency room doctor there could check my records in Boston to treat me correctly.

But -- call me paranoid, call me old-fashioned, call me an electronic dummy -- the whole idea scares me. And not just me.

``I have spent 30 years seeing nothing but how people are harmed [in their] reputation or livelihoods when sensitive medical records are seen by anyone . . . outside of the few people you trust to actually take care of you," said Dr. Deborah Peel , a Freudian psychoanalyst in Austin, Texas, and founder of the Patient Privacy Rights Foundation (www.patientprivacyrights.org ), a nonprofit group. ``If privacy is not fully protected we won't be building anything except the most valuable motherlode of information for data mining on earth."

To be sure, paper records aren't all that secure, either. Anyone in a white coat can peruse paper records and no one would ever know. At least with electronic records, there can be ``audit trails," to show who has peeked at what. Still, do we really want to make it easier for more people to see sensitive medical data?

We know now that personal electronic information on 26.5 million military veterans, including their Social Security numbers and birth dates -- and in some cases, disabilities -- was stolen from the residence of a Department of Veterans Affairs employee who had taken the data home without authorization. In another example of the vulnerability of electronic records, we know that the National Security Agency has secretly been collecting the phone call records of tens of millions of Americans. And we know that credit card information is vulnerable to hacking and accidental release.

``If the Veterans Administration can't prevent the theft of 26 million names and Social Security numbers from an electronic file, why would any patient believe their personal, sensitive health data is safe online?" said Peel.

Already, roughly 150 people, from nursing staff to X-ray technicians to billing clerks, have access to at least part of a patient's records during a hospitalization, according to the US Department of Health and Human Services. And 600,000 payers, providers, and other entities that convert providers' raw data into billing data have some access, too.

The national Health Information Technology effort, authorized by the Bush administration in 2004, is now being hammered out by four groups working through the Department of Health and Human Services.

One group is standardizing the way records are kept -- nitty-gritty stuff like whether the patient's name or something else comes first on forms, said Dr. John Halamka , chief information officer for Harvard Medical School and chairman of this group, called the Health Information Technology Standards Panel.

Another group is working on the ``architecture" of the system -- who gets to see which pieces of data and how the data can be secured. A third is working on privacy policy, sorting through privacy protections from each of the 50 states, whose laws often offer better privacy protection than federal rules called HIPAA, which have been in effect since 2003. (Last week, the Washington Post reported that the federal government has been fairly lax in enforcing HIPAA, receiving nearly 20,000 allegations of privacy violations, but imposing no fines and prosecuting only two criminal cases.)

The fourth group is working on certification -- to see that electronic products offered by vendors have all the features they are supposed to have.

At first glance, all this sounds reassuring. But there is only one consumer representative on the advisory panel, called the American Health Information Community, that is overseeing the work of the other four groups. The other 16 members come from federal agencies, hospital or doctor groups, industry (Intel), an employer (Pepsi), and a state health department (Indiana).

To ensure that patients have adequate privacy and control over their own records, ``more could be done to increase consumer participation in the e-health records process," said privacy advocate Ray Campbell , executive director of the Massachusetts Health Data Consortium, a nonprofit group that uses information technology to improve healthcare. The Massachusetts group is now working with the privacy committee of the health information community.

One of the major issues is how centralized these health information databanks should be.

What has worked well so far, said Halamka of Harvard, is a ``very decentralized approach" like the one he has put in place at Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center. ``The data live in the doctor's office or in the hospital. It never gets put into any central database where it could be hacked. I would be worried if there were a central database in the basement of the White House that could be hacked, but we are not building that."

Only limited information about each patient -- such as name, date of birth and pointers to where care has been given -- would be kept in a regional database, Halamka said. If a doctor needs more information and is authorized to get it, he or she can retrieve records directly from the places the patient received care.

``Thus, the clinical data is local to hospitals and doctors offices," he said, ``but the map of places your data resides in is regional."

Stephanie Reel , chief information officer for Johns Hopkins Medicine, said she has confidence in the privacy efforts of top-notch hospitals, but worries about sharing information across a larger audience. ``Our hospitals do a good job of protecting patient information," she said, ``but people's concerns are legitimate when you are sharing information across a larger audience."

How well privacy can be safeguarded in a national, electronic system is ``the $64,000 question," said Carole Klove , chief compliance and privacy officer for UCLA Medical Sciences.

It was valuable during Hurricane Katrina that New Orleans pharmacies had electronic records so patients could still get prescriptions filled, she said. ``But certainly there are risks in having all your records electronic. Risks can result in inappropriate access."

The good news is that the push to make medical records electronic is still a work in progress. It's not too late for more consumer voices. If you're concerned, you can monitor the workings of the health information technology effort at www.hhs.gov/healthit/ .

Judy Foreman is a freelance columnist and can be reached at foreman@globe.com.

SEARCH THE ARCHIVES
 
Today (free)
Yesterday (free)
Past 30 days
Last 12 months
 Advanced search / Historic Archives