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Legal issues concerning electronic health information: privacy, quality, and liability.
- Source :
-
JAMA [JAMA] 1999 Oct 20; Vol. 282 (15), pp. 1466-71. - Publication Year :
- 1999
-
Abstract
- Personally identifiable health information about individuals and general medical information is increasingly available in electronic form in health databases and through online networks. The proliferation of electronic data within the modern health information infrastructure presents significant benefits for medical providers and patients, including enhanced patient autonomy, improved clinical treatment, advances in health research and public health surveillance, and modern security techniques. However, it also presents new legal challenges in 3 interconnected areas: privacy of identifiable health information, reliability and quality of health data, and tortbased liability. Protecting health information privacy (by giving individuals control over health data without severely restricting warranted communal uses) directly improves the quality and reliability of health data (by encouraging individual uses of health services and communal uses of data), which diminishes tort-based liabilities (by reducing instances of medical malpractice or privacy invasions through improvements in the delivery of health care services resulting in part from better quality and reliability of clinical and research data). Following an analysis of the interconnectivity of these 3 areas and discussing existing and proposed health information privacy laws, recommendations for legal reform concerning health information privacy are presented. These include (1) recognizing identifiable health information as highly sensitive, (2) providing privacy safeguards based on fair information practices, (3) empowering patients with information and rights to consent to disclosure (4) limiting disclosures of health data absent consent, (5) incorporating industry-wide security protections, (6) establishing a national data protection authority, and (7) providing a national minimal level of privacy protections.
- Subjects :
- Computer Communication Networks legislation & jurisprudence
Computer Communication Networks standards
Computer Security legislation & jurisprudence
Confidentiality legislation & jurisprudence
Disclosure
Federal Government
Liability, Legal
Quality Assurance, Health Care
Quality Control
Reproducibility of Results
Telemedicine legislation & jurisprudence
Telemedicine standards
United States
Government Regulation
Information Dissemination
Information Systems legislation & jurisprudence
Information Systems standards
Patient Advocacy legislation & jurisprudence
Privacy legislation & jurisprudence
Subjects
Details
- Language :
- English
- ISSN :
- 0098-7484
- Volume :
- 282
- Issue :
- 15
- Database :
- MEDLINE
- Journal :
- JAMA
- Publication Type :
- Academic Journal
- Accession number :
- 10535438
- Full Text :
- https://doi.org/10.1001/jama.282.15.1466