Section 6.8 Optimize

Section 6 Optimize—Optimization Strategies for Personal Health Records - 1

Optimization Strategies for Personal Health Records

This tool can help you develop policies, procedures and practices for your Behavioral Health Facility that will support the growing and positive trend for clients to keep personal health records (PHRs).

Time needed: 4 hours
Suggested other tools: NA

Introduction

Increasingly, individuals are interested in keeping (PHRs) to better communicate with their health care providers, enhance their understanding of their health and treatment options, make sure health information is as accurate and complete as possible, and improve family health management. PHRs have been found to improve patient engagement in their health and wellness, which research has shown helps improve health care quality and patient safety (see A Leadership Resource for Patient and Family Engagement Strategies, 2013 for an extensive list of such research, available at: http://www.hpoe.org/Reports-HPOE/Patient_Family_Engagement_2013.pdf).

PHRs also serve as a health information exchange (HIE) option for individuals to coordinate and combine information from multiple providers. While many individuals still do not have PHRs, the federal meaningful use (MU) of electronic health records (EHR) incentive program encourages health care providers to support patient access to electronic data that can be incorporated into a PHR.

How to Use

1. Review statistics about PHRs and their benefits and challenges.

2. Understand options for supporting PHR adoption.

3. Develop policies, procedures, and practices in support of personal health record adoption.

Benefits and Challenges in PHR Utilization

Statistical data show disconnects between what Americans say they want and what they actually do with respect to access to health information in general, and maintenance of a PHR. For example, a 2012 survey by Harris Interactive showed:

·  As much as 65 percent of the American population thinks it is important to have online access to doctor visits, prescriptions, test results, and health histories.

·  Only 17 percent of Americans reported currently having that access.

The Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA) requires providers to supply individuals with access to their health records (in any format and with certain exceptions) and the MU incentive program requires provision of clinical summaries generated from EHRs. Yet:

·  As many as 65 percent of physicians have indicated access should be limited (see article in American Medical News available at: http://www.amednews.com/article/20130318/business/130319955/7/).

·  Seventy percent of physicians who received incentive MU payments for stage 1 of the federal program said they did not have any patient requests for records (see article in American Medical News available at: http://www.amednews.com/article/20130318/business/130319955/7/).

Access to health information is not the same as maintaining a PHR. Regarding PHRs:

·  Only 7 percent of individuals currently have a PHR.

·  As many as 77 percent of individuals say they would be likely to use one if recommended by a physician. (Source: California HealthCare Foundation, see: http://www.chcf.org/media/press-releases/2010/new-national-survey-finds-personal-health-records-motivate-consumers-to-improve-their-health.)

It is important to point out that there is strong interest by individuals in their physicians having EHRs, yet lack of understanding about how an EHR impacts quality of care. The following results are from a study reported in 2012 by the National Partnership for Women & Families:

·  About 59 percent of adults surveyed reported that their primary care provider had an EHR.

·  Seventy three percent of EHR respondents said their doctor’s use of an EHR had a very or somewhat positive impact on the overall quality of health care services, compared to only 26 percent of paper-system respondents.

·  There were no significant differences between self-reported health status between those with exposure to EHR and those with no exposure.

·  When asked if EHRs impacted quality of care, 41 percent of paper-system respondents said there was no impact, 10 percent said there was a negative impact, and the remaining 49 percent cited a positive impact.

·  Privacy and security remain concerns—with little difference in attitudes between EHR-system respondents and paper-system respondents. However, patients generally trust EHRs more than paper records in the area of compliance with patients’ rights.

The federal government believes strongly that PHRs can improve health care quality. Not only does the MU incentive program require enhanced provision of electronic data to individuals upon their request, but Medicare, the Department of Veterans Affairs, and the Department of Defense offer electronic access to health information and support for maintaining a PHR via their Blue Button® initiatives (see: http://www.healthit.gov/patients-families/blue-button/about-blue-button). PHRs are believed to improve health care quality, especially for those with chronic illness, because they:

·  Improve patient engagement by helping patients track their health over time.

·  Coordinate and combine information from multiple providers, improving care coordination.

·  Ensure patient information is available in emergencies, when traveling, or when patients have moved or changed providers as a result of a change in health insurance or other reasons.

·  Reduce administrative costs through less time spent searching for records and information within a record, as well as patient access to prescription refill requests, appointment scheduling, test results, and other health information.

·  Enhance provider-patient communications. They can serve as a resource for patients to use to ask questions, remind themselves about conditions they want to report, supply vital data on their health status (e.g., blood glucose levels, weight changes, depression scores).

·  Encourage family health management by tracking and updating preventive services, as well as providing appointment reminders, medication reminders, and other information needed by parents caring for their children, children caring for their parents, spouses caring for one another, and other (authorized) caregivers.

Caveats regarding PHRs include:

·  Cost: Offering a PHR generally means that the provider bears the cost of acquiring and implementing PHR software. In addition, if PHR software is acquired from a third-party vendor and not the EHR vendor, there is a cost to enable sharing of data across the two platforms. Few providers want to pass the cost on to their patients. Cost is a factor for individuals, however, if they seek their own PHR. Some PHR offerings are free for individuals (usually with advertisements supporting the PHR) and others charge a nominal fee.

·  Too many PHRs: If individuals are seen by multiple providers in different organizations, it is possible for them to have multiple PHRs. It can be costly to retrieve data from multiple disparate sources, as well as a quality concern if unique information is not readily available. Patients should be encouraged to adopt only one PHR into which they will move their data if necessary. An HIE organization (HIO) could also support such a service.

·  Health literacy: PHR development requires consideration of patients’ health literacy. Some PHRs are just as technical as EHRs; other PHRs are designed using lay terminology and/or provide access to additional information about the contents.

·  People with disabilities: Obstacles may exist in using PHRs; however, people who have disabilities often can find PHRs that provide the ability to increase font size, translate text to sound, and other features that can enhance their access to health information.

·  Small and rural providers: EHR vendor offerings for small and rural providers may have fewer PHR options. Lack of high-speed Internet access and service “dead spots” may be an issue when using any form of electronic record. However, geographic isolation and shortages of health care providers mean that remote connectivity with patients is crucial; this may be aided by PHRs.

Behavioral health use of PHR

The complexity of health care needs and the fragmentation of care often experienced by those with mental health disorders may be overcome by the use of PHRs, according to a study funded by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ) conducted by Emory University (see http://healthit.ahrq.gov/ahrq-funded-projects/electronic-personal-health-record-mental-health-consumers). However, this study also found that currently available PHRs typically lack mental health-related modules and Emory created a mental health-modified PHR (MH-PHR) in order to conduct its study (see: http://whsc.emory.edu/home/publications/health-sciences/emory-health/summer09/technology-for-mental-health.html).

In another study of patients attending a safety-net clinic, mental health and substance abuse conditions were determined not to be barriers to engagement, but computer competency was important (see http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pubmed/22363761). While there is strong belief that a PHR and access to one’s EHR can be important, several researchers have found that excessive use of cell phones and computers can lead to depression, sleep disorders, low self-esteem, and high levels of stress. (For example, see: http://www.ibtimes.com/mental-health-negatively-affected-excessive-cellphone-and-computer-use-study-730100.)

PHR Options

In seeking to standardize definitions, the federal government commissioned the National Alliance for Health Information Technology to define PHR. This alliance proposed that a PHR was “an electronic record of individually identifiable health information on an individual that can be drawn from multiple sources and that is managed, shared, and controlled by or for the individual.” There are actually several dimensions that help describe and differentiate PHRs:

Sponsor

A sponsor supports the PHR for an individual. In the majority of cases, a provider or the client is the sponsor, although payers, employers, affinity groups to which a person may belong, or HIOs may be sponsors. Many providers believe that the provider-sponsored PHR is essential to assure that the information in the PHR is accurate. If an individual has multiple providers, however, the provider sponsorship defeats the purpose of a PHR that can integrate data across those providers.

Integration

Integration refers to whether a PHR is integrated with an original source of health information.

·  When a PHR is linked directly to an EHR or a payer’s claims database, it is referred to as a tethered PHR.

·  A standalone PHR is not linked directly to any such source.

·  There may be hybrid situations where an HIO sponsors the PHR and links to multiple sources, but this is not commonly available today. Individuals may also have a hybrid set of PHRs, with one or more tethered to providers and one that is self-maintained.

Platform

Platform refers to the medium on which the PHR is maintained.

·  The definition adopted by the federal government assumes the PHR is electronic, but the platform can be Web-based, reside on a personal computer, or be housed on a CD, flash drive, or smart phone.

·  While social media is considered Web-based, it involves processes that go beyond simply hosting data. Facebook and other social media sites are supporting PHR creation. myPHR (www.myPHR.com) is a public service initiative developed by the American Health Information Management Association (AHIMA) to help individuals better manage their health information. It describes the story of a woman whose Facebook PHR chronicled her health history, making it the quickest and most complete source of information for emergency department providers to save her life. (see: http://www.myphr.com/Stories/SuccessStory.aspx?Id=382).

·  PHRs in paper form are not uncommon—especially for use by family members or other caregivers who essentially sponsor an individual’s PHR.

Data Source

In a tethered PHR, the data source is primarily—and sometimes exclusively—the provider. However, providers who do not accommodate patient (or family/caregiver) entry of information into the PHR might be considered to be defeating one of the primary purposes of the PHR: empowering the patient and encouraging self-management. In addition, medical devices are increasingly sources of data for both EHR and PHR.

Business Model

A sponsor usually acquires a PHR through a licensing arrangement with an EHR or other third- party vendor. However, there is a wide array of business models with respect to whether the individual pays to use the PHR. These include fee per usage and advertisements. There are other forms of value proposition, in which the sponsor uses the PHR to create process efficiency, build loyalty, or create messaging aimed at changing behavior and outcomes. For example, an employer may offer employees a free PHR with the hope that enhanced use leads to better health literacy, better employee health, and lower health insurance costs. Affinity groups may offer free-to-member use of PHRs in return for displaying pharmaceutical advertisements.

Privacy Protection

Laws to afford privacy protections of PHRs also vary significantly.

·  When a PHR is tethered to a provider or payer sponsor, the PHR is generally governed under the HIPAA Privacy and Security Rules. The vendor of the PHR is considered a business associate of the HIPAA-covered entity.

·  When a PHR is supplied directly to the individual through a commercial vendor (e.g., Microsoft Healthvault), privacy protection is afforded under the Federal Trade Commission’s Health Breach Notification Rule (see: http://www.business.ftc.gov/privacy-and-security/health-privacy). This regulation complements the Health and Human Services’ Breach Notification Rule, but it addresses only the vendor’s obligation to report a breach; it does not spell out privacy and security protection standards. Some states also have breach notification statutes that may afford somewhat more oversight.

In evaluating commercial vendor offerings, individuals should evaluate the authenticity of a vendor’s statements. For example, some vendors will place symbols on their Web sites indicating that they are accredited by the Better Business Bureau (BBB), sponsored by an affinity group and/or certain providers, or indicate the product is HIPAA Certified, or that transactions are secure because they use the Secure Sockets Layer (SSL) standard. If these symbols do not link directly to the BBB, affinity group, provider, or other source that can validate a relationship to the vendor, they are not valid. In addition, there is no HIPAA certification of PHRs (or EHRs) that is sanctioned by the federal government.

·  Finally, if an individual establishes his or her own PHR on a personal computer without setting up data maintenance and the computer is hacked, lost, or stolen—there is no privacy protection afforded under any laws or regulations.

Policies, Procedures, Practices to Support of PHR

Providers who want to support a PHR for their patients or clients should be encouraged to do so. There is strong evidence to support the value of PHR and individuals appear to be more interested and motivated to use a PHR when encouraged to do so by their providers. However, steps should be taken to ensure both providers and individuals understand what they are and how they should be used.

Provider Roles and Responsibilities

Providers who support PHRs for their patients or clients should ensure that policies, procedures, and practices are in place that describe how support will be supplied and what role and responsibilities each professional plays. These policies, procedures, and practices should cover the following topics: