Health information exchange in US hospitals: The current landscape and a path to improved information sharing
Electronic health information exchange (HIE) was a foundational goal of the 2009 Health Information Technology for Economic and Clinical Health (HITECH) Act, but 7 years later we are far from a nationally interoperable health system. Connected electronic health records have the potential to enable fast access to a wealth of clinical data and can deliver a solution to the highly fragmented US healthcare system. In this review, we present a history and background of HIE, including its potential to deliver significant cost savings to the healthcare system. We examine the key components of HIE, including exchanges, the mechanism, and options available to providers. Health information exchange faces significant challenges, ranging from technical issues to lack of a clear goal, but continued policy initiatives and new technologies represent a promising path to providing clinicians with routine, electronic patient data. Journal of Hospital Medicine 2017;12:193-198. © 2017 Society of Hospital Medicine
© 2017 Society of Hospital Medicine
CONCLUSION
While HIE holds great promise to reduce the cost and improve the quality of care, progress towards a nationally interoperable health system has been slow. Simply defining HIE and what types of HIE are needed in different clinical scenarios has proven challenging. The additional challenges to implementing HIE in complex technology, legal/regulatory, governance, and incentive environment are not without solutions. Continued policy interventions, private sector collaborations, and new technologies may hold the keys to realizing the vast potential of electronic HIE.
Disclosure
Nothing to report.