Health insurance lobby unveils portable health record model.Health insurers are developing a "personal health record" model that looks to standardize records to make them portable between health insurers, with the aim of reducing medical errors, showing people how to be healthier and cutting employers' health-care costs. The eventual goal, according to a coalition of health insurers and industry groups, is to have a "frilly frill n. 1. A ruffled, gathered, or pleated border or projection, such as a fabric edge used to trim clothing or a curled paper strip for decorating the end of the bone of a piece of meat. 2. interoperable" health-care infrastructure for the United States by 2008. The personal health record, or PHR PHR Personal Health Record PHR Physicians for Human Rights PHR Professional in Human Resources PHR Public Health Reports PHR Partnerships for Health Reform Phr Phrygian (linguistics) PHR Presse Hebdomadaire Régionale model, unveiled at a press conference by America's Health Insurance Plans and the Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association
AHIP AHIP America’s Health Insurance Plans AHIP Army Helicopter Improvement Program AHIP Academy of Health Information Professionals AHIP Association of Hearing Instrument Practitioners (Ontario, Canada) AHIP ARPANET Host-IMP Protocol and BCBSA BCBSA Blue Cross and Blue Shield Association , however, say they have identified the core information that should be in those personal health records, and that they have developed and tested standards that will let people transfer their records between health insurance companies. "Efforts ... to provide consumers with portable PHRs are a step forward in the national health IT agenda," said Robert M. Kolodner, a health information technology coordinator at the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services Noun 1. Department of Health and Human Services - the United States federal department that administers all federal programs dealing with health and welfare; created in 1979 Health and Human Services, HHS . The model PHR developed by AHIP and BCBSA is a Web-based tool maintained by insurers, which will hold a patient's claims data and administrative information. AHIP said the PHRs will let patients see their health information and manage it. The records will hold data such as benefits information, and reminders, orders and prescriptions, as well as patient-provided data, such as family histories, immunization immunization: see immunity; vaccination. records and health risk factors. Because of the data contained in insurance claims, insurers are in the best position to provide the PHRs and get them up and running in the near future, the groups said. AHIP and BCBSA drew a distinction between PHRs and electronic health records, which they said are used by providers to store detailed clinical information. About 70 million people now have PHRs through their health insurers, the groups said, and "millions more" will get them next year. AHIP said health insurers have set a goal of incorporating new, doctor-suggested data elements and making the PHRs portable from plan to plan by 2008. In addition to officials from BCBSA, AHIP and HHS HHS Department of Health and Human Services. , the conference featured executives from Aetna and Horizon Blue Cross Blue Shield Blue Shield A US not-for-profit health care insurer that is a reimbursement intermediary for physicians. Cf Blue Cross. of New Jersey, who said their companies are making PHRs available to their enrollees. There also will be a pilot program in two regions of the country sponsored by the National Health Council, a coalition of health agencies--such as the American Cancer Society American Cancer Society, n.pr established in 1913, this national volunteer-based health organization is committed to the elimination of cancer through prevention and treatment and to diminishing cancer suffering through advocacy, scholarship, research, and American Heart Association--nonprofits, and drug companies. A report by the federal Institutes of Medicine suggests that digital health records may reduce costly and fatal medical errors. In December 2006, five large companies--Applied Materials Inc., British Petroleum America Inc., Intel, Pitney Bowes Inc. and Wal-Mart--said they would start a nonprofit institute to develop a Web-based electronic health record for their 2.5 million employees with health coverage. AHIP said the health insurance industry also has adopted a guideline that requires policyholders to approve the transfer of their health records from one insurer to another, with the transfer taking place after enrolling in the new plan. |
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