改善护理过渡:为患者身份管理设计区块链应用程序。

Blockchain in healthcare today Pub Date : 2022-03-14 eCollection Date: 2022-01-01 DOI:10.30953/bhty.v5.200
Mustafa Abdul-Moheeth, Muhammad Usman, Daniel Toshio Harrell, Anjum Khurshid
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引用次数: 0

摘要

背景:美国目前的医疗保健生态系统受到医疗保健提供者之间病人护理过渡效率低下的困扰,这在很大程度上是由于目前存在的许多电子病历(EMR)系统之间缺乏互操作性。由于系统中的数据支离破碎,造成成本增加、不必要的行政负担和重复服务等负面影响,医疗服务提供者和患者都感到非常沮丧。区块链技术允许进行分布式、可审计、不可更改且尊重患者自主权的医疗保健信息交换,从而为减轻或消除这些差距提供了潜在的解决方案。我们的多学科团队确定了医疗过渡所需的关键任务,设计并开发了区块链应用 MediLinker,作为以患者为中心的身份管理系统,解决数据分散的问题,最终帮助提供高价值的医疗服务:我们对 MediLinker 应用程序进行了评估,以确定其是否能够完成门诊病人护理成功过渡所需的各种关键任务。我们的团队创建了 20 个独特的患者使用案例,涵盖了各种医疗需求和社会环境,参与者在接受由四家诊所、一家研究机构和其他辅助性公共服务机构组成的模拟医疗保健生态系统的病例时,需要执行各种任务。任务包括但不限于诊所注册、身份验证、药物对账、共享保险和账单信息以及更新人口信息。在 MediLinker 的这次迭代中,我们特别关注了数字监护和病人撤销医疗信息的功能。此外,在整个模拟过程中,我们还调查了参与者对使用 MediLinker 和区块链技术的看法,以更好地确定应用程序的舒适性和可用性:模拟结果的定量评估显示,MediLinker能够成功完成20个患者使用案例中的所有7个临床场景测试。MediLinker成功实现了以患者为中心的互操作性目标,参与者在四个诊所和研究机构之间转换了他们的模拟医疗保健数据,包括COVID-19疫苗接种情况和当前用药情况。除了完成所有指定的关键任务外,所有符合条件的参与者都能在我们的模拟研究机构注册并随后取消数据访问权限。MediLinker 的数据录入错误率很低,大多数错误都是由于工作流程漏洞造成的。我们对用户看法的定性分析表明,随着教育程度的提高和对区块链技术(如MediLinker)接触的增加,用户对该技术的舒适度和信任度也在提高:在当前的医疗保健生态系统中,无处不在的数据碎片化问题给医疗服务提供者和患者都带来了巨大压力。区块链在健康身份管理方面的应用,如 MediLinker,为解决目前存在的低效率问题提供了可行的解决方案。MediLinker 在我们模拟的医疗保健系统中提供的互操作性有可能通过及时、安全和以专利为中心的方式共享医疗保健信息的关键方面来改善护理的过渡,从而提供一致和个性化的高价值护理。区块链技术在广泛应用方面似乎面临着与其他新型干预措施类似的挑战,即认可度、信任度和可用性。要想在现实世界中充分发挥这种技术的潜力并改变现代医疗保健的实践,还需要进一步的开发和推广。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。

Improving Transitions of Care: Designing a Blockchain Application for Patient Identity Management.

Improving Transitions of Care: Designing a Blockchain Application for Patient Identity Management.

Improving Transitions of Care: Designing a Blockchain Application for Patient Identity Management.

Improving Transitions of Care: Designing a Blockchain Application for Patient Identity Management.

Background: The current healthcare ecosystem in the United States is plagued by inefficiencies in transitions of patient care between healthcare providers due in large part to a lack of interoperability among the many electronic medical record (EMR) systems that exist today. Both providers and patients experience significant frustration due to the negative effects of increased costs, unnecessary administrative burden, and duplication of services that occur because of data fragmentation in the system. Blockchain technology provides a potential solution to mitigate or eliminate these gaps by allowing for exchange of healthcare information that is distributed, auditable, immutable, and respectful of patient autonomy. Our multidisciplinary team identified key tasks required for a transition of care to design and develop a blockchain application, MediLinker, which served as a patient-centric identity management system to address issues of data fragmentation ultimately aiding in the delivery of high-value care services.

Methods: The MediLinker application was evaluated for its ability to accomplish various key tasks needed for a successful transition of patient care in an outpatient setting. Our team created 20 unique patient use cases covering a diversity of medical needs and social circumstances that were played out by participants who were asked to perform various tasks as they received case across a simulated healthcare ecosystem composed of four clinics, a research institution, and other ancillary public services. Tasks included, but were not limited to, clinic enrollment, verification of identity, medication reconciliation, sharing insurance and billing information, and updating demographic information. With this iteration of MediLinker, we specifically focused on the functionality of digital guardianship and patient revocation of healthcare information. In addition, throughout the simulation, we surveyed participant perceptions regarding the use of MediLinker and blockchain technology to better ascertain comfortability and usability of the application.

Results: Quantitative evaluation of simulation results revealed that MediLinker was able to successfully accomplish all seven clinical scenarios tested across the 20 patient use cases. MediLinker successfully achieved its goal of patient-centered interoperability as participants transitioned their simulated healthcare data, including COVID-19 vaccination status and current medications, across the four clinic sites and research institution. In addition to completing all key tasks designated, all eligible participants were able to enroll with and subsequently revoke data access with our simulated research site. MediLinker had a low data-entry error rate, with most errors occurring due to work-flow vulnerabilities. Our qualitative analysis of user perceptions indicated that comfortability and trust with blockchain technology, such as MediLinker, grew with increased education and exposure to such technology.

Conclusions: The ubiquitous problem of data fragmentation in our current healthcare ecosystem has placed considerable strain on providers and patients alike. Blockchain applications for health identity management, such as MediLinker, provide a viable solution to stem the inefficiencies that exist today. The interoperability that MediLinker provided across our simulated healthcare system has the potential to improve transitions of care by sharing key aspects of healthcare information in a timely, secure, and patent-centric fashion allowing for the delivery of consistent and personalized high value care. Blockchain technologies appear to face similar challenges to widespread adoption as other novel interventions, namely recognition, trust, and usability. Further development and scaling are required for such technology to realize its full potential in the real world and transform the practice of modern health care.

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