Making Medical Records More Resilient

Hurricane Katrina showed that the current methods for handling medicalrecords are minimally resilient to large scale disasters. This research presents a preliminary model for measuring the resilience of medical records systemsagainst public policy goals and uses the model to illuminate the current s...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Rudin, Robert
Other Authors: Peter Szolovits
Published: 2008
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/40285
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author Rudin, Robert
author2 Peter Szolovits
author_facet Peter Szolovits
Rudin, Robert
author_sort Rudin, Robert
collection MIT
description Hurricane Katrina showed that the current methods for handling medicalrecords are minimally resilient to large scale disasters. This research presents a preliminary model for measuring the resilience of medical records systemsagainst public policy goals and uses the model to illuminate the current state of medical record resilience. From this analysis, three recommendations for how to make medical records more resilient are presented.The recommendations are: 1) Federal and state governments should use the preliminary resiliencemodel introduced here as the basis for compliance requirements for electronicmedical record technical architectures. 2) Regional Health Information Organizations (RHIOs) should consideroffering services in disaster management to healthcare organizations. This willhelp RHIOs create sustainable business models. 3) Storage companies should consider developing distributed storagesolutions based on Distributed Hash Table (DHT) technology for medical recordstorage. Distributed storage would alleviate public concerns over privacy withcentralized storage of medical records. Empirical evidence is presenteddemonstrating the performance of DHT technology using a prototype medicalrecord system.
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spelling mit-1721.1/402852019-04-12T09:31:48Z Making Medical Records More Resilient Rudin, Robert Peter Szolovits Clinical Decision-Making Hurricane Katrina showed that the current methods for handling medicalrecords are minimally resilient to large scale disasters. This research presents a preliminary model for measuring the resilience of medical records systemsagainst public policy goals and uses the model to illuminate the current state of medical record resilience. From this analysis, three recommendations for how to make medical records more resilient are presented.The recommendations are: 1) Federal and state governments should use the preliminary resiliencemodel introduced here as the basis for compliance requirements for electronicmedical record technical architectures. 2) Regional Health Information Organizations (RHIOs) should consideroffering services in disaster management to healthcare organizations. This willhelp RHIOs create sustainable business models. 3) Storage companies should consider developing distributed storagesolutions based on Distributed Hash Table (DHT) technology for medical recordstorage. Distributed storage would alleviate public concerns over privacy withcentralized storage of medical records. Empirical evidence is presenteddemonstrating the performance of DHT technology using a prototype medicalrecord system. 2008-02-19T13:45:08Z 2008-02-19T13:45:08Z 2008-02-17 MIT-CSAIL-TR-2008-010 http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/40285 Massachusetts Institute of Technology Computer Science and Artificial Intelligence Laboratory 92 p. application/pdf application/postscript
spellingShingle Rudin, Robert
Making Medical Records More Resilient
title Making Medical Records More Resilient
title_full Making Medical Records More Resilient
title_fullStr Making Medical Records More Resilient
title_full_unstemmed Making Medical Records More Resilient
title_short Making Medical Records More Resilient
title_sort making medical records more resilient
url http://hdl.handle.net/1721.1/40285
work_keys_str_mv AT rudinrobert makingmedicalrecordsmoreresilient