Personal Health Records: A Guide for Clinicians
Patient-controlled personal health records are the key to successful interaction between physician and patient. They form the core for joined-up communication throughout health organizations. Still, the very name is capable of alarming both patient and doctor. Are they reliable? Are they complete? Are they confidential? Where do you access them?

For the doctor, additional concerns surround the implementation: how do you include these online tools in your busy schedule?

How much will they add to your existing spend on information technology?

Can you get paid for doing all this extra work?

Now you can find dependable answers to all of these questions.

Written by a physician who has developed his own personal health records software for patients and doctors to interact, Personal Health Records: A Guide for Clinicians explains how to get the best from your patient's records and how to put the information to good use, helping both your patient and yourself to a more effective and efficient outcome in any clinical situation.

 

“The author is a clinical academic, patient and pioneer in his field and does a grand job of explaining the ins and outs of PHRs in a non-patronising manner for the non-tech savvy”

– From a review published in Health Services Journal by: Dr Emma Stanton, Commonwealth Fund Harkness Fellow and Specialist Registrar at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust

 

 

"1101203250"
Personal Health Records: A Guide for Clinicians
Patient-controlled personal health records are the key to successful interaction between physician and patient. They form the core for joined-up communication throughout health organizations. Still, the very name is capable of alarming both patient and doctor. Are they reliable? Are they complete? Are they confidential? Where do you access them?

For the doctor, additional concerns surround the implementation: how do you include these online tools in your busy schedule?

How much will they add to your existing spend on information technology?

Can you get paid for doing all this extra work?

Now you can find dependable answers to all of these questions.

Written by a physician who has developed his own personal health records software for patients and doctors to interact, Personal Health Records: A Guide for Clinicians explains how to get the best from your patient's records and how to put the information to good use, helping both your patient and yourself to a more effective and efficient outcome in any clinical situation.

 

“The author is a clinical academic, patient and pioneer in his field and does a grand job of explaining the ins and outs of PHRs in a non-patronising manner for the non-tech savvy”

– From a review published in Health Services Journal by: Dr Emma Stanton, Commonwealth Fund Harkness Fellow and Specialist Registrar at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust

 

 

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Personal Health Records: A Guide for Clinicians

Personal Health Records: A Guide for Clinicians

by Mohammad Al-Ubaydli
Personal Health Records: A Guide for Clinicians

Personal Health Records: A Guide for Clinicians

by Mohammad Al-Ubaydli

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Overview

Patient-controlled personal health records are the key to successful interaction between physician and patient. They form the core for joined-up communication throughout health organizations. Still, the very name is capable of alarming both patient and doctor. Are they reliable? Are they complete? Are they confidential? Where do you access them?

For the doctor, additional concerns surround the implementation: how do you include these online tools in your busy schedule?

How much will they add to your existing spend on information technology?

Can you get paid for doing all this extra work?

Now you can find dependable answers to all of these questions.

Written by a physician who has developed his own personal health records software for patients and doctors to interact, Personal Health Records: A Guide for Clinicians explains how to get the best from your patient's records and how to put the information to good use, helping both your patient and yourself to a more effective and efficient outcome in any clinical situation.

 

“The author is a clinical academic, patient and pioneer in his field and does a grand job of explaining the ins and outs of PHRs in a non-patronising manner for the non-tech savvy”

– From a review published in Health Services Journal by: Dr Emma Stanton, Commonwealth Fund Harkness Fellow and Specialist Registrar at South London and Maudsley NHS Foundation Trust

 

 


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9781444348255
Publisher: Wiley
Publication date: 07/05/2011
Sold by: JOHN WILEY & SONS
Format: eBook
Pages: 136
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Mohammad Al-Ubaydli MD Honorary Senior Research Associate, University College London, London, UK

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Table of Contents

About the author vii

Acknowledgments viii

Foreword ix

Introduction xii

What is a PHR? xvii

Part 1 Your patients

Chapter 1 Sharing data with your patient 3

Chapter 2 Protecting your patient’s privacy 13

Chapter 3 Patient communities 19

Part 2 Your work

Chapter 4 PHRs and clinical teams 31

Chapter 5 Educating patients 39

Chapter 6 Saving time in your clinic 46

Part 3 Your practice

Chapter 7 Technology 55

Chapter 8 Law 63

Chapter 9 Finance 67

Chapter 10 The future 74

Part 4 Appendices

Appendix A Google Health 87

Appendix B Microsoft HealthVault 98

Index 113

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