[Med-privacy] PHRs
peter marshall
pwm@comcast.net
Mon, 30 Jun 2008 11:00:11 -0700
PHR vendors bypass patients, pitch to business
A recent study finds vendors of personal health records are focusing
less on consumers and more on employers and insurers.
By Pamela Lewis Dolan, AMNews staff. July 7, 2008.
After several years of mostly striking out with consumers, personal
health record vendors are adopting a business-to-business marketing
model, courting employers and insurers in hopes of expanding PHR
adoption.
A recent study by Cambridge, Mass.-based industry analyst Chilmark
Research found that of the more than 200 PHRs on the market, only 20%
are Internet-hosted, which is what the study focused on.
Of those, 40% are thriving, 35% are treading water "and the remaining
25% are walking zombies, not quite dead, but not very alive, either,"
the study said.
Study author John Moore said PHR vendors, until recently, were
marketing to consumers. But with the exception of those with a chronic
disease or their caregivers, consumers had expressed very little
interest.
Now employers and health plans are starting to see the potential for
PHRs to reduce health care costs, Moore said, and are offering
incentives for their use. So vendors are focusing on strategic
alliances.
Moore said privacy and security hurdles still need to be cleared before
consumers can be sold on offering personal information for any PHR.
"What really surprised me [in doing the survey] is what a terrible job
the PHR vendors have done addressing privacy and security as an
industry," he said.
Moore believes the entrance of Google and Microsoft into the market
could help raise the bar on what consumers will expect.
But the American Medical Association and others aren't waiting for
vendors to respond, but would like to see legislation mandating
security standards. The AMA is advocating that HIPAA be extended to all
entities that
have contact with health data, including PHR vendors.
[...]