Why Should Anyone Care About Health Data Interoperability?

By SUSANNAH FOX This piece is part of the series “The Health Data Goldilocks Dilemma: Sharing? Privacy? Both?” which explores whether it’s possible to advance interoperability while maintaining privacy. Check out other pieces in the series here. A question I hear quite often, sometimes whispered, is: Why should anyone care about health data interoperability? It sounds pretty technical and boring. If I’m talking with a “civilian” (in my world, someone not obsessed with health care and technology) I point out that interoperable health data can help people care for themselves and their families by streamlining simple things (like tracking medication lists and vaccination records) and more complicated things (like pulling all your records into one place when seeking a second opinion or coordinating care for a chronic condition). Open, interoperable data also helps people make better pocketbook decisions when they can comparison-shop for health plans, care centers, and drugs. Sometimes business leaders push back on the health data rights movement, asking, sometimes aggressively: Who really wants their data? And what would they do with it if they got it? Nobody they know, including their current customers, is clamoring for interoperable health data. “Medical records closes at 5:00pm on Friday” by Regina Holliday. Forgive me if I smile, out of pure nostalgia. These leaders are taking me back to the 1990s when I w...
Source: The Health Care Blog - Category: Consumer Health News Authors: Tags: Data Health Policy Tech The Health Data Goldilocks Dilemma: Sharing? Privacy? Both? health data interoperability Susannah Fox Source Type: blogs