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Privacy and Security and Health Information Technology (health IT)

Electronic health information exchange promises an array of potential benefits for individuals and the U.S. health care system through improved clinical care and reduced cost. At the same time, this environment also poses new challenges and opportunities for protecting individually identifiable health information. In health care, accurate and complete information about individuals is critical to providing high quality, coordinated care. If individuals and other participants in a network lack trust in electronic exchange of information due to perceived or actual risks to individually identifiable health information or the accuracy and completeness of such information, it may affect their willingness to disclose necessary health information and could have life-threatening consequences. Coordinated attention at the Federal and State levels is needed both to develop and implement appropriate privacy and security policies. Only by engaging all stakeholders, particularly consumers, can health information be protected and electronically exchanged in a manner that respects variations in individuals’ views on privacy and access.

The tabs above or the links below will provide you with access to a number of health IT resources related to privacy and security.

ONC Strategic Plan

Available Here

Medical Identity Theft Final Report

Available Here

Privacy and Security Framework

Announced

Upcoming Events

The World Health Care Congress 2nd Annual Leadership Summit on Consumer Connectivity
Carlsbad, CA
February 24-27, 2009
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5th Academic Medical Center Conference
Chapel Hill, NC
March 1-4, 2009
More>>

All Upcoming Events items

Personal Experiences

"We have hospitals in Afghanistan and Iraq, and many of the soldiers would arrive without records in Germany, with no record of the CAT scans or what happened in surgery in Afghanistan or Iraq. The clinicians in Germany would have to re-operate on the patient, would have to redo all their x-ray evaluations, CAT scans, etc...." ~ Colonel John Holcomb

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