10
The Personal Health Record — A Potential Hedge Against Rising Healthcare Costs
Posted by | Posted in Personal Health | Posted on 10-05-2010

Employing a personal health record can decrease healthcare expenses because many of the healthcare dollars go toward the generation of information needed to make diagnoses and provide appropriate treatment. With passage of HR. 3590, which will expand healthcare coverage to an additional 32 million persons by 2019, more patients will be establishing new doctor/patient relationships and the flow of health information will most likely increase significantly.
Although in recent years there has been a push for doctors to purchase and utilize electronic medical record programs for management of patient health data in the hopes that there will be a centralized database of patient health information that will minimize treatment errors, the truth of the matter is, most doctors have not adopted the technology, and even if most did, because of the differences in styles of practice and documentation, a central database would not contain all of the data updated in real-time to meet healthcare needs of every patient in every healthcare setting and situation. Ergo, the best repository of health information is you and your own personal health record.
One scenario illustrating the cost of generating and exchanging health information is the initial new patient visit to establish a doctor/patient relationship. A physician evaluating a patient for during an initial encounter needs information provided by the patient which is oftentimes lacking because the patient is not knowledgeable and/or because previous treatment records were not requested, requested but not received, or requested and received but illegible. The new physician will oftentimes need approximate dates of diagnoses, approximate dates and results of prior tests, and approximate dates of hospitalizations with some details of the care which was given. If that information is not available, some doctors will order tests that he or she might otherwise not order had the necessary information been available at the time of the patient visit. The net result is an increased expense for the patient or at the very least another component of healthcare inflation.
Many diagnostic determinations and treatment courses of action are made based on subjective data, i.e. information communicated by the patient. For example, in evaluating chest pain a doctor will usually need to know when and how the pain started, the location of the pain, the frequency of the pain, the duration of the pain, the intensity of the pain, the quality of the pain (cramping, burning, stinging, etc.), what makes it better, what brings it on, what makes it worse, and other symptoms associated with the pain before deciding whether to admit the patient to the hospital to rule out a heart attack or whether to treat the patient for acid reflux outside of the hospital. Many times however, because patients have not thought about the information in an organized way and/or because of nervousness, patients feel put on the spot when asked certain questions about their symptoms and conditions. By recording information pertaining to symptoms and conditions to be discussed during an impending doctor visit, a patient is better prepared for the visit with useful information which can reduce expenses by minimizing over-reliance on testing. Additionally, the recorded information is likely to be more accurate than information which has not been recorded and thus more likely to maximize the quality of healthcare received.
A personal health record might therefore also reduce healthcare expenses during follow-up visits or sick visits because a well-designed personal health record software program enables the patient to create pre-visit notes and journal notes about new and established problems, which can be printed out and carried to the doctor at the time of a visit. Additionally, the updating of entries in the personal health record by the patient tends to even better prepare the patient to answer questions during an impending doctor visit.
At the time of the writing of this article the duration of an average doctor visit in the United States is approximately 16 minutes which is fairly generous compared to a county like Holland where it is 8 minutes. Factors which are likely to result in a decrease in the duration of doctor visits in the United States include healthcare reform which will increase the number of patients receiving treatment, the shortage of physicians, and increasing medical practice overhead. If the average duration of a visit to the doctor in the United States does shorten the number of visits to address a set number of conditions is likely to increase unless more problems can be addressed during each visit.
Implementing and maintaining a personal health record in principle should reduce healthcare expenses not only at the time of the new patient visit, but also during established patient visits by shifting the diagnostic emphasis from objective date to subjective data and minimizing the number of required visits. The reduction of healthcare expenses by the utilization of a personal health record is predicated on the principle of more efficient generation and exchange of accurate health information.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purpose only and is not intended to be a substitute for medical consultation with a qualified professional. The author encourages Internet users to be careful when using medical information obtained from the Internet and to consult your healthcare professional if you are unsure about your medical condition.
Watch the video related to personal health
“In the last segment today we continue discussing natural cramp relief and the fun of wheat grass shots. Then I push my online store and some products I carry on there….because it’s my show, and I only pick the best products for your health! As a bonus we end with a hang over helper and quickly go over some movement therapies for pain reduction.” — Recorded live on Justin.tv – www.justin.tv
Help answer the question about personal health
How can i get a personal physical health trainer?Where can i find a personal physical health trainer? I am trying to loose weight, and i dont know what to do. Do you know where i can find one?

Personal responsibility for my own medical care thanks. I don't want the government to control me, especially when it comes to my health, any more than it does.
Also, the government is inefficient at getting anything done. Think about this, what if you were sick and needed to go to the hospital? If the government ran the place, it would run like the DMV – long lines and nothing gets done.
Health care is not a right, it's a privilege. If you can pay for it, it's yours. If you can't pay for it, go get a job like the rest of us.
You can easily check your minimal health care rates in internet, for example here – health-quotes.talk4fun.net
try using cucumber on yr eye…. slide a thin slide n put it on yr eye every nite b4 u go to sleep for abt 10-15min…it help…n aso dun drink any water 3-4 hr b4 yr bed time
@higashi001 It’s nothing new. Microsoft has been developing health care technologys for years now.
@higashi001 LOL! So true. We’ll let UNIX take care of healthcare XD.
Not with a socialized medical system
It’s all very Middle-Class isn’t it with no poor or unemployed…
Loosing weight and keeping it off is a big concern for many people.
One of the hardest parts is staying motivated and for this a physical trainer can help.
A gym or fitness center will probably be the best way to find a qualified trainer.
Check out your local gyms first and see if any are running any specials. Often times you can get a free trial at the gym.
If they do not offer a free trial, then you should ask to speak with one of the trainers. This way you can get an idea of how they will be able to help you and access their competence.
The hardest part is getting out and doing it, but you will feel much better about yourself in the end if you stick with it.
Unless you have to prove it, I would just tell them you have it when you don't. It is none of their concern anyway…
Or you could try calling Anthem Blue Cross /Blue shield or Aetna for individual coverage. They usually have TV ads for open enrollment this time of year…but not necessarily cheap. Or you could ask your car insurance agent if they know of any coverage from the same company for health insurance and you might get a break for having the insurance at the same company and maybe get it with a high deductible to save money…still might not be cheap….
You might be able to get by with siging a waver of liability to the school that you will not sue them if you catch an illness in the course of your schooling??
The furture looks boring
washing hands, brushing teeth, taking showers
@HaDeSakudo Are you implying some kind of racism and consequence…?
Just kidding
A reasonable price is $250 a month. You can get this through your school most easily, and cheaper, too. Being an international student, most US health carriers are NOT going to want to cover you.
You ALSO might be able to find it in your country of residence. Or you can ask them if they'll waive it, because you can't find a provider willing to take you.
Well the colour white pretty much stands for a clean and sterile environment, which the future will be like i guess haha.
this gonna be in 500 years…
@maoomph Quite a bit of this stuff is acctually around right now, it just isn’t cost effective
As long as you keep asking these vague questions, you'll never get intelligent responses.