Litcius/Paper detail

Recommendations for achieving interoperable and shareable medical data in the USA

Ana Szarfman, Jonathan G. Levine, Joseph M. Tonning, Frank Weichold, John C. Bloom, Janice M. Soreth, Mark Geanacopoulos, Lawrence Callahan, Henry M. Spotnitz, Qin Ryan, Margaret E. Pease‐Fye, John S. Brownstein, W. Ed Hammond, Christian Reich, Russ B. Altman

2022Communications Medicine44 citationsDOIOpen Access PDF

Abstract

Easy access to large quantities of accurate health data is required to understand medical and scientific information in real-time; evaluate public health measures before, during, and after times of crisis; and prevent medical errors. Introducing a system in the USA that allows for efficient access to such health data and ensures auditability of data facts, while avoiding data silos, will require fundamental changes in current practices. Here, we recommend the implementation of standardized data collection and transmission systems, universal identifiers for individual patients and end users, a reference standard infrastructure to support calibration and integration of laboratory results from equivalent tests, and modernized working practices. Requiring comprehensive and binding standards, rather than incentivizing voluntary and often piecemeal efforts for data exchange, will allow us to achieve the analytical information environment that patients need.

Topics & Concepts

InteroperabilityIdentifierComputer scienceData exchangeUnique identifierHealth information exchangeData collectionData accessHealth dataData scienceRisk analysis (engineering)Computer securityDatabaseBusinessHealth careHealth informationWorld Wide WebMathematicsEconomic growthEconomicsProgramming languageStatisticsArtificial Intelligence in Healthcare and EducationBiomedical and Engineering EducationElectronic Health Records Systems