Sun Sentinel Palm Beach Edition

Medical records may get easier to access

- By Ricardo Alonso-Zaldivar

WASHINGTON — The Trump administra­tion Tuesday launched a new effort under the direction of presidenti­al son-inlaw Jared Kushner to overcome years of problems with electronic medical records and make them easier for patients to use. Medicare will play a key role, eventually enabling nearly 60 million beneficiar­ies to securely access claims data and share that with their doctors.

Electronic medical records were ushered in with great fanfare but it’s generally acknowledg­ed they’ve fallen short. Different systems don’t communicat­e. Patient portals can be clunky to navigate. Some hospitals still provide records on compact discs that newer computers can’t read.

The government has already spent about $30 billion to subsidize the adoption of digital records by hospitals and doctors. It’s unclear how much difference the Trump effort will make. No timetables were announced Tuesday.

The government-wide MyHealthED­ata initiative will be overseen by the White House Office of American Innovation, which is headed by Kushner. His stewardshi­p of a broad portfolio of domestic and foreign policy duties has recently been called into question due to his inability to obtain a permanent security clearance.

Medicare administra­tor Seema Verma said her agency is working on a program called Blue Button 2.0, with the goal of providing beneficiar­ies with secure access to their claims data, shareable with their doctors. Software developers are already working on apps, using mock patient data.

The Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services is also reviewing its requiremen­ts for insurers, so that government policy will encourage the companies to provide patients with access to their records.

“It’s our data, it’s our personal health informatio­n, and we should control it,” Verma said, making her announceme­nt at a health care tech conference in Las Vegas.

Independen­t experts said the administra­tion has identified a key problem in the health care system.

“This is a good first step, but several key challenges need to be addressed,” said Ben Moscovitch, a health care technology expert with the Pew Charitable Trusts.

For example, the claims data that Medicare wants to put in the hands of patients sometimes lack key clinical details, Moscovitch said. If the patient had a hip replacemen­t, claims data may not indicate what model of artificial hip the surgeon used.

“Claims data alone are insufficie­nt,” Moscovitch said. “They are incomplete, and they lack key data.”

The administra­tion could address that by adding needed informatio­n to the claims data, he explained.

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