Ensuring the privacy and confidentiality of electronic health records

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Publication Type Journal Article
School or College College of Humanities
Department Philosophy
Creator Francis, Leslie
Other Author Terry, Nicolas P.
Title Ensuring the privacy and confidentiality of electronic health records
Date 2007
Description In 2004, President Bush announced his plan to ensure that most Americans would have electronic health records within ten years. Although substantial progress has been made toward achieving that goal, this progress has primarily reflected institutional interests and priorities by focusing on system architecture and technical standards. This article argues that in order for a nationwide transition to electronic medical records to be successful, however, the system must receive acceptance from patients and physicians. Thus, it must address and protect issues at the forefront of their concerns: namely, privacy and confidentiality. Instead of merely adopting the minimal protections afforded by HIPAA, the electronic health records system must embrace an autonomy-based, default position of full patient control over personal information, with very limited exceptions. Consequently, hard choices must be made as to the architectural and patient consent models that may involve subjugating some interoperability and comprehensiveness ambitions to principled protections of patient autonomy.
Type Text
Publisher University of Illinois College of Law
Volume 2007
Issue 2
First Page 681
Last Page 735
Language eng
Bibliographic Citation Terry, N. P., & Francis, L. P. (2007). Ensuring the privacy and confidentiality of electronic health records. University of Illinois Law Review, 2007(2), 681-735.
Rights Management (c)University of Illinois College of Law
Format Medium application/pdf
Format Extent 326,173 bytes
Identifier ir-main,10379
ARK ark:/87278/s69601n9
Setname ir_uspace
ID 702479
Reference URL https://collections.lib.utah.edu/ark:/87278/s69601n9
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