Patient-matching – the ability of different electronic health records to correctly identify a patient so that all his/her information is accurately transmitted – is a critical function of interoperability. In fact, it is the cornerstone upon which all electronic data-sharing should be built because nothing else truly works if critical patient data falls into the chasm between systems.
Looking Through Another Lens
Consider how poorly the healthcare IT industry currently performs on that front viewed through the lens of another safety-focused industry:
- More than 500 deaths stemmed from passenger airline crashes in 2018, according to Dutch aviation consulting firm To70 and the Aviation Safety Network. To70 estimated that the fatal accident rate for large commercial passenger flights in 2018 at one fatal accident for every 3 million flights.
- A 2017 American Hospital Association survey revealed that 45 percent of large hospitals reported that difficulties in accurately identifying patients across health information technology (IT) systems limited health information exchange.
- There were 4.3 billion passengers on scheduled flights in 2018. If healthcare’s patient matching success rate were airline passenger deaths in 2018, more than 2 billion (more than one-quarter of the world’s population) would die due to failed patient matching!
A Misconception of Uniqueness
What is unique about “patient identification?” Nothing, really, in data terms. And yet, the misconception continues. The U.S. Government Accountability Office (GAO) this month issued a report, “Approaches and Challenges to Electronically Match Patients’ Records across Providers,” that perpetuates the tired notion that that the healthcare community must turn inward to find a “solution.”
The wheel-spinning makes no sense when standards-based solutions (plural) already exist – and work well – in other industries (e.g., financial-services). Credit-card standards, for example, can produce multi-vendor, unique numbers that can match ID worldwide. It’s likely those standards could be easily and quickly customized for healthcare.
It’s past time for the healthcare community to recognize that smart people also work in other industries and that the answers to “healthcare IT challenges” really aren’t that different than the challenges that others also face … and already have overcome.
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BookZurman’s team of multidisciplinary, highly specialized experts continue to drive progress and innovation in the healthcare IT community. For more information on this and other work in the areas of standards and interoperability, informatics architecture, clinical decision support, or terminology, follow us on Twitter and LinkedIn.