Bingo. I'll say the unicorn is the group that can bend hipaa such that customer data can be more easily exchanged between providers. There is already a group making a product that most health insurance companies utilize for this and they dont know it.
Before I left the industry I saw many dropping third party analytics and building their own solutions in need of more m&a dollars from declining membership nationally.
I think it's happening. When a friend signed up with one hospital, their diagnoses & medicines subscribed showed up from other unrelated hospitals and clinics too. It wasn't a full import, but it was a lot!
Also with most lab work being done by quest & labcorp, I think that is pretty close to being portable for the %80 case too.
I think this is what apple health is also trying to do.
What if you do not want your information exchanged?
Or recorded at all?
Information wants to be free so much that it leaks!
Given experian experiance, I would prefer the option to keep a thumbdrive with me. If I lose it? My fault. Exams can be redone. Printouts can be provided. But you can't fix a leak.
Healthcare providers are unwilling to plug in a thumbdrive from a patient because it could contain malware. Secure online exchange is the only practical approach to health information exchange. Most providers will allow patients to opt out, but this puts your health at risk. Doctors often need to see your historical chart in order to make an accurate diagnosis and prescribe effective treatment. You can't always just redo an exam, test, or imaging study.
I want to opt out of any collection of data - not just the exchange of data. Because the best way to make sure nothing will leak is to have no records in the first place.
I accept all the risk. But there is no freedom to do that - leaving the thumbdrive aside, by just bringing papers that I would keep - not them.
Healthcare providers have to keep records both to deliver effective care and protect themselves against malpractice liability. It is unreasonable of you to expect them not to do so. Those risks aren't yours to accept.
There is utterly nothing you can do to prevent the american heathcare apparatus from obtaining and sharing your heath data. It will be exchanged between your state agency, care provider and insurers constantly. Your insurer will likely de-identify data in the event of a leak. The other two may not (save regulatory requirements) I have first hand experience here.
>Search for something generic like "computer" and you can see an example of how hard it is to get information instead of ads.
Panel for computer sales at top. A maps menu showing computer shops near me. A Bestbuy link. Another panel for computer sales. Walmart, amazon, newegg. A wiki. And another sales panel.
More damning. The only non-commerce related link is the one for Wikipedia. On DDG mobile, there is one Best Buy link and everything else is a site delivering some form of information on the topic.
Personal : small library of notebooks, I generally dont share these
Professionally : physical notebooks and Onenote books. Every time I join a new team I start a new notebook and when I leave I pass it to someone else if they want it. My Onenote files are publicly accessible to anyone.
My team runs a mission critical application nearly all of us were duped into supporting. Ops engineering turned into "process champion" and now I yell at people about ticket structure (bane of my existence) instead of diagnosing db performance issues (things I gleefully lose sleep over.) Now I question my passion for IT daily, fall asleep at lunch and wait for the day I do bad enough to be fired.
Its a bit like wikipedia, it doesnt look like much initially but going in with purpose shows you just how much more in depth they are. Examine also updates their research regularly, that alone puts them above "any old health site"
Before I left the industry I saw many dropping third party analytics and building their own solutions in need of more m&a dollars from declining membership nationally.