New Survey Finds Physicians Want To Limit Patient Access To Their EHR

Posted on by Frank J. Rosello

Even as policmakers are pushing patient engagement, a new survey signals doctors may not be ready to relinquish control of their patients’ medical record.

Eighty-two percent of U.S. physicians responding to a recent survey indicated they want patients to actively participate in their own healthcare by updating their electronic health records. However, only 31 percent said they believed a patient should have full access to his or her own record, with 65 percent indicating patients should have limited access and 4 percent saying they should have no access.

Highlights of Doctor Survey: How Much Access Should Patients Have to Their Electronic Health Records?

31% think patients should have full access to their electronic health record

65% believe patients should have limited access to their electronic health record

4% believe patients should have no access to their electronic health record

Source: Accenture

The findings come from a recent Harris Interactive survey conducted on behalf of global consulting and technology services firm Accenture.

The results were consistent among 3,700 doctors surveyed by Accenture in eight countries: Australia, Canada, England, France, Germany, Singapore, Spain and the United States. Harris surveyed 500 doctors in each country except Singapore, where it surveyed 200 physicians.

Limited access

While nearly half of U.S. doctors (47 percent) believe patients should not be able to update their lab test results, the vast majority (95 percent) believe patients should be able to update some or all of the standard information in their health records, including demographics, family medical history (88 percent), medications (87 percent) and allergies (85 percent). Moreover, 81 percent of the doctors surveyed believe patients should even be able to add such clinical updates to their records as new symptoms or self-measured metrics, including blood pressure and glucose levels.

“Many physicians believe that patients should take an active role in managing their own health information, because it fosters personal responsibility and ownership and enables both the patient and doctor to track progress outside scheduled appointments,” said Mark Knickrehm, global managing director of Accenture Health. “Several U.S. health systems have proven that the benefits outweigh the risks in allowing patients open access to their health records, and we expect this trend to continue.”

In fact, nearly half of doctors surveyed (49 percent) believe that giving patients access to their records is crucial to providing effective care. But only 21 percent of doctors surveyed currently allow patients to have online access to their medical summary or patient chart, the most basic form of a patient’s record.

EHRs get doctors support

More than half of doctors surveyed (53 percent) believe that the introduction of electronic health records has improved the quality of patient care, and the overwhelming majority (84 percent) say they are somewhat or strongly committed to promoting electronic records in their clinical practice. Most (77 percent) believe the right investments in adopting electronic records are being made and 83 percent believe they will become integral to effective patient care in the next two years.

Article written by Bernie Monegain, Editor for Healthcare IT News

 

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