Posts Tagged ‘electronic health records’

Frankenstein Was an Amateur

Posted in security on July 5th, 2009 by irv – 1 Comment

There’s a big push in the U.S. right now to computerize health records so they can be more easily searched, transferred and analyzed. The potential benefits touted include greater portability – go to a new doctor and never worry about getting all your records for them – and wonderful new technologies like automatic checking for unsafe drug interactions.

Of course there’s a lot of money involved, too. The American Recovery and Reinvestment Act of 2009 (you know. The stimulus bill) created an Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology and allocated billions of dollars to promote adoption of electronic health records (see article here). Yeah. That’s what the health industry needs: More bureaucracy.

The Spring 2009 issue of Rand Review (no link. I’m working from a hard copy) has an impressive array of charts and graphs and numbers claiming that health technology can save vast amounts of money. They even make the hilarious claim that computerizing people’s health records will improve privacy! Usually at this point I would put a list of links to articles about hacking incidents related to the subject I’m discussing but that doesn’t begin to show the magnitude of the problem. Instead, here’s one link to a Google search for medical records compromised: http://www.google.com/#hl=en&q=medical+records+compromised. It’s showing me 649,000 records when I run it today. Interestingly, there doesn’t seem to be a lot of duplications.

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