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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
A 3 page paper. More private companies are entering the health care field, specifically in terms of electronic recording. This paper reviews four articles that discuss what some companies are doing. Bibliography lists 4 sources.
Page Count:
3 pages (~225 words per page)
File: ME12_PGprvchl.rtf
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
Journal of Medicine, San Francisco Business Times and Time magazine. These are respected publishers but that does not automatically validate the text is completely honest and accurate. One of the
issues concerning health care is that it is a very inefficient system. Actually, there is no national system. A number of politicians, including Hillary Rodham Clinton have promoted the idea
of digital medical records. These digitized records would increase efficiency, reduce costs, and decrease medical accidents. In 2007, the California Public Employees Retirement System (CalPERS) announced it would invest
$700 million in a new private company established by former federal health IT coordinator, Dr. David Brailer (Rauber, 2007). This new company, Health Evolution Partners, will invest in projects that
will lead to more unified services and that are innovative in the field. Most doctors keep paper records for their patients although there are some who have gone digital
but there is still no nation-wide system (Steinbrook, 2008). Approximately 14 percent of American doctors keep electronic records (Kingsbury, 2008). A number of companies are attempting to enter the electronic
health data field. Some include Dissia, which is a nonprofit group of employers, Microsoft Health Vault, Google Health and others. This is a $2.1 trillion industry so it is no
wonder many private companies are attempting to break into it, particularly since the writing on the wall seems to suggest more and more health care providers will soon take advantage
of digital record-keeping. One option is for consumers themselves to keep all their information in Web-based storage vaults. All of these repositories, such as those identified and others, promise consumers
complete control over their information as well as security (Steinbrook, 2008). This author points out that privacy and security promises "may lack legal force" (Steinbrook, 2008, p. 1653). That is
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