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U.K. to implement electronic patient records. (Up front: news, trends & analysis).


U.K. citizens soon will be able to access their health records electronically. As part of the U.K.'s National Heath heath, tract of open land
heath, tract of open land characterized by a few scattered trees, abundant moss cover, and numerous low shrubs, principally of the heath family (see heath, in botany).
 Service (NHS NHS
abbr.
National Health Service


NHS (in Britain) National Health Service
) initiative, tests are being conducted to determine the best way to enable patients to access their records.

Currently, the NHS faces a huge challenge in dealing with growing volumes of data, and it warned that the amount of paper produced by NHS is increasing at a substantial rate. According to according to
prep.
1. As stated or indicated by; on the authority of: according to historians.

2. In keeping with: according to instructions.

3.
 research from U.K. document management specialist Elision e·li·sion  
n.
1.
a. Omission of a final or initial sound in pronunciation.

b. Omission of an unstressed vowel or syllable, as in scanning a verse.

2. The act or an instance of omitting something.
, 13.5 billion pieces of paper currently are stored as patient records across primary and secondary care in the NHS.

The electronic health records strategy forms a key part of the government's 2.3 billion [pounds sterling] ($3.69 billion U.S.) nation al program to overhaul the NHS' information technology. Under the plan, electronic patient records will be implemented in all primary care trusts and hospitals by December 2007.

Document management will be crucial in helping the NHS meet its goal of implementing electronic health records, said Murray Bywater, managing director of IT healthcare specialist Silicon Bridge Research. "If you scan the paper records, they can then be attached in digital format to the computer record," he said.

Patients would be able to access their electronic health records before or after an office visit, surgery, or other procedure, giving them more control and responsibility over their health decisions. Health professionals could have access to an individual's health information at the touch of a button, which will improve information sharing See data conferencing.  between doctors and nurses.

Ways to ensure records are kept secure are also being tested, the NHS said. For example, some patients at Bury Bury (bĕ`rē), city (1991 pop. 60,785) and metropolitan district, NE England, located in the Manchester metropolitan area on the Irwell River and linked by canal with Bolton and Manchester.  Knowles Health Centre in Oxford tested a special mouse that reads a fingerprint fingerprint, an impression of the underside of the end of a finger or thumb, used for identification because the arrangement of ridges in any fingerprint is thought to be unique and permanent with each person (no two persons having the same prints have ever been  to confirm a patient's identity before granting that user access.

The NHS intends to provide every person in the country with his or her own electronic health record by March 2005.
COPYRIGHT 2003 Association of Records Managers & Administrators (ARMA)
No portion of this article can be reproduced without the express written permission from the copyright holder.
Copyright 2003, Gale Group. All rights reserved. Gale Group is a Thomson Corporation Company.

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Article Details
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Author:Swartz, Nikki
Publication:Information Management Journal
Article Type:Brief Article
Geographic Code:4EUUK
Date:Jul 1, 2003
Words:320
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