Abstract
Computerization in health care is rapidly advancing and is improving patient safety (eg, computerized physician order entry decreases the frequency of medical errors) and practitioner effectiveness and efficiency. Computerization and other developing technologies raise concern about the privacy of health information. In 1996 Congress passed the Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act (HIPAA), which included privacy provisions that went into effect in April 2003. HIPAA has important impacts on health care providers. With the tremendous growth of health care information systems comes the need to standardize the storage and sharing of health information, so there is an initiative underway to develop a National Health Information Infrastructure, which will set standards for health information exchange among consumers, providers, and the public health sector, as well as consolidate the “silos” of health information that are in place today.
- computers
- Health Insurance Portability and Accountability Act
- HIPAA
- medical errors
- information management
Footnotes
- Correspondence: Karen J Stewart MSc RRT, Medicine Services, Charleston Area Medical Center, 3200 MacCorkle Avenue SE, Charleston WV 25304. E-mail: karen.stewart{at}camc.org.
Karen J Stewart MSc RRT presented a version of this report at the 33rd Respiratory Care Journal Conference, Computers in Respiratory Care, held October 3-5, 2003, in Banff, Alberta, Canada.
- Copyright © 2004 by Daedalus Enterprises Inc.