Author:
Freeman Phyllis,Robbins Anthony
Abstract
After 25 years of debate about privacy of automated personal health data,
the U.S. Congress has set a deadline of August 1999 for enacting health
information privacy legislation. The urgency to establish national policy in
the United States re-emerges with implementation of a 1996 law mandating a
unique identifier for each participant in the U.S. medical care system and the
use of a uniform electronic data set for all health information transmitted in
financial and administrative transactions. The impact of electronic data
storage and transmittal on privacy, health outcomes, and medical care is
unclear. A three-step analytic scheme can clarify the issues in the policy
debate and for future assessment. The first step is intended to elicit, for
the first time, a precise, accurate, and reproducible description of personal
health data transactions and chains of transactions, independent of the policy
preferences of any interested party. The second step allows the reader to
analyze these transactions according to who benefits first and foremost from
each. This scrutiny clarifies the reasons why parties to the debate tend to
disagree. The third step characterizes how Congress is likely to perceive the
policy process and consider its options before enacting any particular set of
compromises. Understanding the policy deliberations and potential effects of
evolving information technologies and new national privacy rules should aid
assessment of results.
Publisher
Cambridge University Press (CUP)
Cited by
8 articles.
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