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Google Moves into E-Health
Friday, February 22, 2008 |  2:36 PM

Google engineering manager Alan Newberger blogged yesterday about the software giant’s pilot program with Cleveland Clinic, which integrates patients’ electronic health records with their Google accounts. The initiative seems the first step in a long-term goal to provide citizens with universal access to their medical histories, and the ability to quickly exchange information with insurance plans, medical groups, pharmacies and hospitals.

Patients don’t have to participate in the program. Those that opt in will give authorization via Google’s “AuthSub” interface. Still, the initiative is sounding the alarm bells for privacy rights groups – the same groups that have spoken out against a national health network and other government-sponsored electronic health efforts.

Maybe a watchful eye on how Google handles the situation, including the very real privacy and confidentiality concerns, will provide the federal government a clue on how to get their own initiatives moving. It certainly wouldn’t be the first time industry paved the road.

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Comments

Industry is "paving the road" for integrated electronic patient health records??? I can only guess that you haven't read "Best Care Anywhere" by Phillip Longman. Longman documented how the VA developed integrated electronic patient health records a long time ago and how it improved patient outcomes. Industry has been slow in picking up on this practice because although it's generally best for the patient, it's not particularly profitable for industry.

Civil Servant  | Monday, February 25, 2008 |  12:46 PM



The creator of Netscape proposed an e-health initiative was back when, that reduced paper work and standardized everything from forms to payments to coverage. We all know how that panned out. The health companies refused to give up THEIR way of doing things. WHY? Because they make money doing things their way of course!

iggy  | Saturday, February 23, 2008 |  3:51 PM