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Approaches to patient health information
exchange and their impact on emergency medicine Regional health information organizations
and electronic health information exchange may have an important
impact on the practice of emergency medicine in the United States.
Regional health information organizations are local or regional
information-sharing networks that enable electronic data interchange
among stakeholders in a given geographic area. These stakeholders
may include hospitals, skilled nursing facilities, clinics, private
physicians' offices, pharmacies, laboratories, radiology facilities,
health departments, payers, and possibly the patients themselves.
Regional health information organizations are being formed across
the country to improve the safety and efficiency of clinical care;
improve public health efforts, biosurveillance, and disaster management
response; and potentially create large databases of deidentified
aggregate data for research. Because of the unique need for rapid
access to information and the acuity of the clinical environment,
few areas of the health care delivery system stand to change and
benefit more from health information exchange than our nation's
emergency departments. This article will explain the motivation
for the development of regional health information organizations,
identify some of the important issues in their formation, and
discuss how their development might affect the practice of emergency
medicine.
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