
1997 Partnerships
for Networked Consumer Health Information Conference
Transcripts of Plenary Sessions and
Breakout Sessions
Panel:
"Legislative and Policy Issues"
Thursday, April 17, 1997
1:00-4:00 PM
Moderator: Kathleen Hall
Jamieson, Ph.D., Director, Annenberg Public
Policy Center, Philadelphia, PA
Dr. Paul Clayton, Ph.D.,
President-elect, American Medical Informatics
Association, Professor and Chair, Department of Medical
Informatics, Columbia University, New York, NY
Robert Gellman, J.D., Privacy and
Information Policy Consultant, Washington, D.C.
Chip Yost, Legislative Director,
Health, Office of Senator Robert Bennet, Washington, DC
Robert Harmon, M.D., National Medical
Director for Preventive Services, United HealthCare
Corporation, Oakton, VA
Margaret Gerteis, Ph.D., Director of
Education and Communications, The Picker Institute,
Boston, MA
Shannah Koss, Government Health Care
Solutions Executive, IBM Corporation, Bethesda, MD
Joseph Henderson, M.D., Director,
Interactive Media Laboratory, Dartmouth Medical School,
Hanover, NH
Dr. Jamieson: We will finish this set
of post-Partnerships Conference sessions by discussing
the importance of information in our society. The
Annenberg Public Policy Center is avidly involved with
this issue and is working for those interested in it.
I will now introduce the first member of our panel,
Dr. Paul Clayton, President of the American Medical
Informatics Association.
Clayton: My remarks today will
elaborate on a study dealing with the protection of
electronic information. While conducting the study, we
visited various sites at HMOs and other places. The
entire document relating our procedures and findings is
online at The National
Academy Press.
We found that there are several threats to electronic
information, the first ones being that some people may
not have the resources to get data -- and security. The
principle that we are talking about today is whether
someone has access, though security systems, to
confidential information, thus giving the opportunity to
blackmail. This can happen electronically or by paper.
The hacker is the other problem. The real hacker may just
get information with nothing to be done with it, only
ruin the integrity of the data. The malevolent hacker may
act more destructively, trying to crash an entire system
of files.
The biggest threat is the lack of policy, with the
next biggest threat being difficulty balancing between
those who use the system. In addition, security measures
can be annoying. No one wants to do a 20-second log-in
when they can make a simple phone call. In short, there
is no absolute security. The real threat is the
tremendous flow of information that results from the fact
that a physician can pass information anywhere.
I have conflicting answers. In the pharmacy realm, the
flow of information benefits managers. They met with us
and reported that 80 percent of prescriptions are known
in this country by the pharmacies. Psychiatrists' records
may be confidential, but the pharmacy records are not.
This of course leads to a breach of confidentiality
promised by the higher levels. For instance, the medical
information bureau is where the results of our tests go
when we apply for insurance and so on. The accrediting
organizations come in to play as well. No one is
responsible for all of it, but there is a an interlocking
chain of players.
The question of who is charged is raised. On the
current policy there is a voluntary group: The Joint
Committee on the Accreditation of Health Care
Organizations. It is the most prestigious. The problems
are that redress by an individual is difficult; penalties
are not defined; there is little oversight for the
interorganizational flow of information; and there are
overall conflicting health policies.
There are no real policy answers to move us forward in
this challenge. There are systemic threats as well as a
lack of definition of fair information practices. Data
are no longer controlled by a single organization, and
economic incentives, insurance, marketing, employment,
and other forms of unintended secondary use come into
play. Technology permits the unobserved transfer of data.
This committee made several suggestions that we hope
the Kassebaum-Kennedy group will consider with their
bill. We would like to see some form of individual
identification used. There needs to be access controls,
providing that only the authorized persons can see the
data. We need audit trails to follow the flow of
information. We also need physical controls, such as
security and disaster recovery. We need to protect the
remote access points. We should encrypt the data with
software as well. Some of our recommendations were to
develop policies that would involve security plus
confidentiality. Possibly a security officer and
sanctions are needed. We need education for consumers and
improved authorization forms, as well as patient access
to edit logs.
To address the systemic problems, we have the National
Committee on Vital and Health Statistics. We also
have to implement consumer awareness about defining and
adopting fair information practices. Again, a good,
secure system calls for a universal identifier as well as
a method of redress. In short, further research is
necessary.
To conclude, you will never stop electronic medical
records. This technology is too mobile, and paper isn't
as well protected with the newer technologies for
electronic information. Organizations do not feel the
pressure, and we therefore need a more aggressive
approach to confidentiality. The widespread flow of
information is the greatest risk to the individual. Thank
you very much.
Jamieson: I would now like to
introduce Robert Gellman, head of the Confidentiality
Subcommittee of the National Committee on Vital and
Health Statistics.
Gellman: Thank you. I am going to
talk about the work on the national statistics. I worked
for a long time on Capitol Hill, and many things have
failed up there. One move that has taken place is that in
the Kennedy-Kassebaum Bill a provision was included
stating that if Congress doesn't pass the privacy law by
1999, the Secretary of Health and Human Services (HHS) is
authorized to write privacy guidelines.
The Subcommittee for Confidentiality had 6 days of
hearings with computer users dealing with the medical
information networks. We heard from researchers,
insurers, law enforcement officers, and several other
representatives. Based on these hearings, it can be said
that everyone favors security legislation of one form or
another. Having said that, most do support some form of
legislation such as a uniform law that would attempt to
deal with the confidentiality issue.
The second conclusion drawn from the hearings is that
everyone prefers legislation to regulation. The problem
that arises, however, is there is a tendency to want to
handle things piecemeal. If you try to deal with this in
pieces, it will not be treated in the best way. We need
standardization as well.
Everyone says that confidentiality is a problem in the
arena of medical care, and that it needs some
legislation. Then everyone says we use medical records
for social reasons and they can't be totally controlled.
Everyone is right, but we still need confidentiality.
A few observations: Computerization has benefits for
privacy, but people fear their records may be seen by
hackers and such. Insiders are also a problem as they can
use others' records. A lot of people use nonidentifiable
records for research reasons. However, medical records
today have identifiers on every page, and it is an
enormous task to keep them confidential. With a computer
you can do it in seconds. This will ultimately preserve
the patient's privacy. Unfortunately, none of the bills
do a very good job discussing the preservation of
privacy.
If you saw the flow chart of health records, the truth
is that they are no longer confidential. They are seen by
hundreds of individuals, and they can have dozens or
hundreds of individual records. Those people who are told
that the information goes no further than the hospital
have not been told the truth. Passing along of medical
records is a consequence of third-party payments in our
medical system. At the same time it is too expensive and
too difficult to make the records private, yet accessible
by the appropriate sources. In the Kennedy-Kassebaum
Bill, the Attorney General has the power to access any
record by subpoena, so again, there will never be any
total privacy.
The Condit Bill is 90 pages long, but by the time we
are through with the issue we will have a bill that is
150 pages long. The problems are that everyone is a good
guy in this issue. Everyone needs something, and it is
good versus good, not good versus evil. If we are to have
third-party payments and affordable health care, we
cannot accomplish all our goals without some give and
take. We can only make progress with lots of hard work,
which we have already been doing. The next step is the
National Committee's progress, where we'll make
suggestions to the Secretary in June. It will then be
taken to Congress where all the decisions will be made.
In Congress we have already been working on some of these
same issues for the last two years. The bottom line is
that the issue of patient records and confidentiality
needs to be moved up on the priority list in Congress.
Thank you.
Jamieson: I would now like to
introduce Mr. Chip Yost, Legislative Assistant to Senator
Robert Bennett.
Yost: I would like to say that I am
fairly new to this area, and my colleagues before you may
have had a lot longer period of involvement. Here is the
proof that Congress does the best and worst work under
pressure. We simply have not been all that successful in
establishing and maintaining rationality on Capitol Hill
because of the various groups involved.
What is important is that, as we craft the
legislation, we are careful not to set this all in
concrete. We may need to change it in 20 years, and that
will not be an easy task. We also want the
"plumbing" to work. We want the components of
the system to work so that all continues to function
while the other is working as well. I was very naive when
Don Detmer, Senior Vice President at the University of
Virginia, came to me when we thought we should get
involved. We all agreed that we should work on this. What
is most remarkable on the Hill is that these different
groups say that they will support the legislation if we
solve their problems. When we solve their problems, we
get them coming back saying, "We still oppose it
because it still may not solve all our problems. We will
get back to you." This is the atmosphere we work in.
In closing, we are committed, and we think that
ultimately we would prefer a little more guidance from
the Hill. They will write the legislation. But the data
requirement in the Kennedy-Kassebaum Bill was added on
the floor by the Finance Committee, which has made this
process very long with all the little twists and turns
that occur. I think we all want to come to a resolution.
We can all resolve this thing, but we all have to start
in that process. Thank you.
Jamieson: We are now open to any
questions. I will start by asking if there is some kind
of hierarchy to define what is most important in
confidentiality.
Gellman: The question, as I heard it,
is whether some records are more sensitive than others --
whether psychiatry, AIDS records, and so on, are more
important. The bottom line is that, if we define levels
of importance, people could be subject to three or four
different laws, depending on how many different problems
they have. And again, what is sensitive to one person is
not necessarily sensitive to others. We cannot operate a
system that would assign different weights to different
information.
Audience: Is there an idea of
ownership of the records in the Committee?
Clayton: I like to say that no one
owns the records; we are more like custodians. We don't
own them outright, and so we couldnt sell them, for
instance. But we are taking care of them.
Gellman: The concept of ownership is
very problematic. Someone could own a piece of paper as
with the old way, but ownership is very unhelpful in this
case.
Audience: I feel I own my record in
California -- is that wrong now?
Gellman: It doesn't really matter.
The right personnel have interest in information only --
not the record, itself.
Audience: Then what are the rights of
the patients?
Clayton: We have been hearing that
there is no real concept of ownership when it comes to
patient records.
Yost: I think it is important that
people have the right to see their records, which many
don't. I use the example of my business transactions
where I get a copy and the other guy gets a copy. We can
go in circles trying to figure out how to set up a system
where patients have this right and where their privacy is
protected -- maintaining this balance is difficult.
Audience: I think it is very
important to many citizens for their own protection.
Gellman: Your comment is a fair one.
But in general, the bills that have been proposed will
provide better protection for records than any other law
in the country. Whether doctors own the information or
not, they have the right to do what they want.
Jamieson: Instead of talking about
ownership, let's use the terminology "protection of
the information to be changed." We can talk about
the Freedom of Information Act in conjunction with this
idea.
Gellman: Every bill will give
patients open access to their records, but there will
always be exceptions.
Clayton: There are provisions in some
cases where doctors can see something as detrimental
because there may be information that if revealed could
lead someone to commit suicide. Then again, what if
someone refused to give a service provider permission to
have their records in the computer? When we have systems
that work only by computer, we may not be able to help
them with the proper care.
Gellman: You can also always sue your
doctors for your records under the malpractice law, but
this suggestion is not recommended.
Audience: I believe that there is
legislation in Massachusetts where authors say it is
patient-driven and patient-centered. Can any of you speak
on that?
Yost: I am not familiar with that
bill.
Gellman: I am also unfamiliar with
that bill, but I will offer a general comment. There are
so many people who use an individuals records
without that persons consent. And no matter what
the State laws say, federal persons such as the Attorney
General will still have that power. There are too many
other higher levels. It is hard for patients to protect
their own interest here. It is hard for the people to
understand their rights and sign the proper forms in all
conditions. People waive their rights all the time
without really understanding their situation. They might
do this, for instance, if they are in pain and
desperately want relief.
Clayton: People simply don't have the
right representation, so they must be more aware.
Yost: I might add that in part this
is a function of our health care system -- the customer
in many cases being the insurance company, HMO, or
employer -- as they are the ones paying. In many cases,
patients may end up signing a form without the
opportunity to learn the meaning of what they are
signing, as they are not the customer.
Jamieson: Do you see a differential
in the amount of patient confidentiality that will be
used?
Yost: There may be some times when
confidentiality may be more of a problem. I don't want to
say HMOs are not careful with information, but many times
information floats around different offices and is sent
to the wrong place.
Audience: Bob, you articulated some
date that the Kennedy-Kassebaum Bill lays out, that kicks
the responsibility for developing privacy guidelines back
to HHS. What happens during the 2-year timetable in terms
of all the institutional knowledge, and does the Bill
state when all the gathered information must come
together to be utilized to set up legislation?
Gellman: The Committee would love to
help, but there is no formal process in this area. If
there were some expertise to help draft the legislation,
we would love to implement it, but that wouldn't solve
the political problem here.
Yost: To overcome the political
problems is the most important priority.
Audience: I am curious to know
whether any help could be derived from studying the
information systems of the Department of Defense (DoD)
and the Veterans Administration (VA) Hospital. Would
studying their systems of privacy be a help?
Gellman: DoD gives difficult issues.
The employees have a lot of specific records, and the
authorities do have a lot of rights to individual's
information. The VA has some administrative problems in
terms of how the information flows. There is a specific
part in the Condit Bill addressing this and how to take
care of it.
Clayton: Health Care Financing
Administration has the most records in the world, but the
intraorganization environment is where no one is in
control. When the information is going from here to
there, no one is in charge.
Yost: I got a phone call from a
reporter in Utah who said I was violating his First
Amendment rights by not disclosing to him the Senator's
medical records.
Audience: Some of these issues are on
some kind of international scale. Are there any plans for
international implementation?
Gellman: That is a good question.
There is an international control, but we don't know what
the different countries want to do themselves and what
they want to do with us in this matter. It is going to be
very difficult for any of us to address. Some of these
things will not be able to be addressed.
Audience: It's my understanding that
the law forces are interested in preserving unfettered
access. Is this likely to be a significant legislative
factor?
Gellman: It's a very difficult
problem. They need to be able to get access to records
and prosecute criminals -- what are the procedures before
they get records? Any procedures or requirements you
impose will increase costs. How do you balance off these
different interests?
Yost: It's always interesting to talk
to the FBI. They believe they should be exempt because
they have a good cause. What should they go through to
get the records? They shouldn't be able to just walk up
and get medical records.
Jamieson: Thanks to our first panel.
I would like to introduce the members of our second
panel. Robert Harmon will be our first speaker.
Harmon: I would like to shift the
focus from information about the consumer to information
for the consumer. I would like to congratulate HHS on the
new healthfinder web site.
I'm going to talk about what kind of
information is going to consumers these days, and then I
will discuss some quality approaches. I'm bringing the
perspective of U.S. Healthcare. We were formed by a
merger of Metlife and other groups. I'm located in the
Washington, DC area. I was formerly in the Government. We
are concerned with preventive medicine and demand
management. We encourage people to improve their health
through self-care. Our company uses many different
platforms. They utilize pamphlets, telephone, video,
television, and the Internet.
I've got a series of slides for you.
They are about trends in the health care industry. In a
recent survey, we found 58 percent of HMOs have telephone
help lines. This is a rapidly growing area of consumer
health information, and employers are offering it. Now,
about newsletters on health: 93 percent have them in the
HMO sector, and 45 percent of employers do. Self-care
books are also used as educational tools. There has been
a large increase in the use of self-help books. Dr. Koop
has his own book out. Then, there are audiotape health
messages and Internet services.
This is our own Internet product. A
member can connect and find out a lot about the programs.
This is where an individual can sign up with a password
and find linkages reviewed by a panel, search the
library, and utilize the systems interactive
capability with a nurse or counselor. We have two plans
of our own that have bought this product. And our
Internet address is http://www.OptumCare.com.
Here's a definition for Consumer
Quality Index (CQI). It's a systematic approach -- the
measurement, evaluation, and improvement in the quality
of all products and services through disciplined inquiry
and teamwork. I believe strongly in business units. I'm
pleased to report that there is a focus on quality.
Customers and buyers are into it, and DoD is very
interested in the quality agenda.
The objectives of the CQI program are
the highest quality of demand management services and
level of satisfaction for our client, special studies,
and identification of deficiencies.
These are the essential CQI program
elements: program descriptions, committees or teams,
clinical standards, audit tools, and an annual report.
Are there standards out there? They are
lacking at this time. The National Committee on Quality
Assurance standards are addressed by telephone
counseling, quality management, credentialing, members'
rights, and preventative health services. Through them we
can get feedback on such questions as, "How are we
doing on promoting flu shots and so forth?"
The areas with standards include
credentialing, telephone systems, silent monitoring of
calls, client records, and tracking of complaints.
Here is a sample of quality standards.
We answered phones with an average response rate of 21
seconds; the quality of our nursing record was 100
percent; call satisfaction was 95 percent, and medical
appropriateness was 100 percent. What has improved? Our
telephone service, use of guidelines, completion of
computer screens, policies and procedures, customer
reports, and training. And our goal is optimal customer
service and satisfaction.
Jamieson: What are you
doing to specifically minimize access to records?
Harmon: We have a
general information line open to the public, and we have
passwords in place that must be used to gain access to a
persons home page.
Jamieson: Has the
system ever been violated?
Harmon: No, not that
we know of.
Jamieson: How do you
know if it's been breached?
Harmon: Our vendor
takes care of that.
Jamieson: Our next
panelist is Margaret Gerteis.
Gerteis: I too am
concerned about the rights of consumers and patients. I
have been investigating this for 10 years. This is a
quick mission statement for Picker Institute: to promote
health care quality assessment and improvement strategies
that address patients' needs and concerns, as patients
define them. And, as we should know, you may think you
know what patients care about, but you're likely to be
wrong.
These data came from work some
colleagues did. A few years ago, we were in charge of a
patient survey and were interested in getting feedback .
In the process of developing questions, these colleagues
had to winnow it down, and we convened groups of patients
and physicians to rank qualities of a good doctor.
Physicians ranked as a number one priority that the
doctor should be thorough. Patients ranked one that the
doctor should be skillful. Most of these qualities were
agreed upon by both sides as being what they wanted in
the top 10. Now, let's see where they disagreed.
Included in the top 20 for patients
(but not for doctors) were the following: Doctors should
explain risks, diseases, and medications in language that
could be understood -- and an important diagnosis should
make sense.
Physicians choices for the top 20
(but not on the patients' top 20) were the following:
that a chart should be there, that the doctor not
embarrass the patient, that staff are polite, and that
information is private.
Patients wanted information, and
doctors tended to emphasize amenities -- things like
hotness of food, convenience of parking, etc. Both agreed
about skill level and competence level. We tended to find
similar findings with nurses and other health care
people.
Patients care about information. They
want information that will help them pick providers or
plans. People want to know that somebody is overseeing
the availability and quality of this information. When
you ask patients, they would like to try to get a uniform
set of standards.
People with chronic illnesses have very
different concerns. They want to know about member
services. We found that the level of understanding of
what services are covered is abysmal. In trying to get
Medicare coverage, consumers had trouble getting through.
They want to know what's covered and what is not covered.
People's concerns change when they get sick.
Here are some concerns that have come
up during our research. We set up focus groups across the
country, and we have been working with clients over the
years, and we pulled data together.
The first concern was how the system
works or fails. People do not believe that there is a
health care system that works on their behalf. They don't
see components working together in a coordinated way, and
they don't have information on basic coverage. Thirty to
37 percent don't get the information they need to go home
from the hospital. Negotiating the system is difficult.
The second area of concern is
information about clinical decision making. Today, I
think people question more. Twenty percent of office
patients and 36 percent of hospital patients got involved
in decisions about their care. I will share this quote:
"I didn't know before that you could refuse!"
That comes from an elderly Jamaican woman. She was part
of an advanced directives group and became very animated
when talking about medical care. I want to show you a
brief excerpt from a tape with various patients talking
about their experiences with physicians.
[A tape is played with a number of
people talking about questions they raised when they went
to talk to the doctor, and about problems they had run
into when they had tried to form a dialogue about health
care with various physicians.]
Audience: Hello, my
name is Keith Hewitt, I had two questions, the first
about holistic medicine. You are not a holistic provider.
By talking to so many people, there's no wonder there's a
breakdown in communication. As a health client, if you
try to read the literature that comes with a health plan,
it's very difficult to break it down, even if you read it
five times. Is there an effort to simplify the language
in health care brochures?
Harmon: There's a big
effort to make it simplified. More and more plans are
going to direct access without primary care. There is an
effort to explain in understandable language and put it
on the Internet so people can read it there. Usually,
questions come up in the home, and in the privacy of the
home, a family can call the nurse with a very good set of
resources. She is backed up by a reference shelf and
online sources. We will look information up and call
people back. Audience: It will be interesting to see what
the trends will be -- how both sides develop respect.
Gerteis: You see it
more widely now. In courses at medical school, they have
sessions on communication. When you go into practice, you
don't reinforce many of those basic skills.
Specialization and fragmentation come up time and time
again. A man talks about going to a number of doctors,
and the doctor asks him to repeat the story even though
the man brought along a chart.
Audience: When you
have a panel of information, a person has family and
friends and advocates. Can the system handle advocates
and the person's helper? In some cases, individuals are
unable to speak for themselves.
Gerteis: We do advise
patients to get help. When we talked to a young man with
AIDS on the video, he told us that his significant other
was always welcome in the doctor's office.
Harmon: Most self-help
books talk about what to do on the doctor's visit. You
have to make the most out of your 15 minutes.
Audience: Can the
system support such a strategy of managed care?
Harmon: That limited
time can be used in the best way. There are wonderful
sources out there like healthfinder and different media sources.
I called out of the examining rooms, and they're not
equipped to handle a lot of those phone calls. Calls can
be screened first.
Audience: How can you
get patients' needs into structure and tracking.
Harmon: Some patients
are keeping their own records on asthma and such. There
are online records, where patients can keep their own
flow chart.
Jamieson: Now, I'd
like to welcome our final group of panelists for this
afternoon. The first speaker is Shannah Koss, and the
subject is regulation.
Koss: Today, there are
certain regulations that already apply to the type of
system we are talking about developing, which will
contain records that the regulatory scanner are
appropriate for. I'm going to try to present the industry
review. I plan to provide a customer/industry view of why
the addition of regulation of consumer health information
systems would do more harm than good. We heard the Vice
President's remarks at the conference. We're looking for
accurate, timely, relevant, unbiased information. Does
this exist today?
In improving the system, do you want
automated or unautomated capabilities? Is decision
support software different from health care information?
Not much. The same information could be ferreted out if
you are diligent and have lots of time. In today's health
care environment, the individual is expected to be
informed. We are at risk if we think one person is giving
us all the information we need.
Which regulations do apply? Labeling
requirements for drugs or devices are regulated by the
Food and Drug Administration. Advertising for
prescriptions is considered an extension of the label,
and other advertising is judged on the basis of its being
truthful and not misleading. Civil liability law is also
present (that applies to either products or procedures),
as are restrictions on medical practice without a
license.
Do we touch on the regulatory standard
appropriate for decision support? I would say no.
Information and the practice of medicine are not held to
this standard, and because safety and effectiveness are
generally driven in a very formal, narrow research
context. Many interpersonal sources are sought because of
the inadequacies of the current system, such as self-help
groups, and support groups. Consumers are the ultimate
decision makers regarding their care and seek community
input on a broad set of factors related to this care.
Placing consumers as decision makers
raises the question of what is the evidence of risk? We
haven't heard what evidence there is of risk.
I think information technology brings
new power to the consumer. Navigational tools can make a
person feel comfortable and can be tailored to the
individual, with greater accuracy than any one provider
can give.
So what is IBM doing? It sees
information technology as an enabler -- we're not in the
health care information business. Our consumer health
care offering is for sponsorship organizations (managed
care or employee).
Turn to Allina and see what they've
used, including the Healthwise handbook, nurse info-line,
health risk survey, provider directory, benefit plan
information, and classes and seminars.
What are the unintended effects of
regulation? If the Government takes a heavy approach in
this area, companies will not invest in the long-term
research level. That would be one of the greatest losses.
It would be very paternalistic and would deny
information, and it would restrict one of the
cost-effective approaches to care. It also fails to
recognize alternative information resources for today or
tomorrow.
With diseases like AIDS, information is
most critical to the patient. Consumers can help drive
medical development, and market forces can address
quality and often do -- as is seen with products like
consumer reports, guidelines, and healthfinder.
Jamieson: Our final
speaker is Dr. Joseph Henderson.
Henderson: I'd like to
focus on the situation where regulation is heavy and look
at what might be coming. To define it in terms of web
sites is limiting in my opinion. I am going to focus on
areas where there are significant concerns on the impact
of the quality of life of a person who might be carrying
a baby, or any individual. If my 7-year-old has an
appendicitis, or if I have breast cancer, the decision of
what choices to make and where to get the information to
influence me is a serious decision.
The delivery of information and
education is via media, and by media I mean interactive
access to information, ideas, or experiences. Now that's
experience, not just information.
Regulation if enacted must be applied
at all levels of program development. Let me characterize
the "regulees." They are a diverse, motley
group. They range from one person to a multiparty system.
They are motivated by passion or money. They do their
communicating with text or they are developing more
complex forms of media. They may be very knowledgeable or
not. They may have lots of time or not. They may have the
will to create informed sites or not.
We now have a mature art to create
moving, communicating experiences. We can provide
interactive learning that is the best that media can
offer to help patients understand complex concepts. On
the other hand, these powerful media tools can be used to
coerce, confuse, or promote propaganda. Other industries
have interest in this. Health care is no stranger to
this. Network capacity will create a programming vacuum.
Great care must be taken to make sure information
provided to decision makers is as unbiased and objective
as possible. Development must include some evidence that
what is imparted is doing no harm, and is actually doing
some good. Even when circumstances are optimal, problems
remain.
Scientific, rigorous evaluation is
expensive and time consuming, sometimes exceeding costs
and the time limit of the system itself. If funded as
part of a commercial venture, it may end up a flawed
product. This would be true even if the product were
outstanding. One must strike a balance between quality
and the practical constraints of this domain. Proposals
to ensure excellence must carefully consider these and
other realities. This requires a development environment.
A panel on interactive media and
communications is trying to make some sense of this
environment. Here are some thoughts I have with regard to
that.
I assert that in the great majority of
cases it is unwise to view evaluation of interactive
health communication media as a scientific process. There
are in most cases no hard points, mostly feelings and
opinions. There are other methods adapted by researchers
that have been developed. The randomized control trial is
not appropriate. In some cases it is very difficult -- it
may ask, for example, did you get the mammogram, versus
what was the quality of mammogram? That's a much harder
question.
Regulation would require clear
criteria, must have clear results, and would have a means
of assuring accuracy of content. In setting up
guidelines, there is the question of what criteria we
would establish for what type of care -- are we talking
about Western medicine, holistic medicine, or what?
In the end, the answer is not to
regulate. There is a role in policy in ensuring that
well-intentioned providers have tools to work with -- a
set of practical guidelines for developers. Developers
would greatly benefit from applied research in the form
of procedures of software tools, application of funding,
and other development. It will yield generally useful
knowledge. Simultaneously we must think of ways to apply
those systems to the future.
Jamieson: So is anyone
in the audience for regulation?
Audience: I was
prepared for some argument, but I agree with both
speakers. What I find very difficult is that there's
really no difference between what you are describing and
what you have today. When I go to the bookstores, I see
"Drinking Man's Diet" and "Our Bodies,
Ourselves." The people who want to regulate in
certain unnamed areas do not differentiate between
software and literature. Why apply different standards to
web pages than you do to books?
Henderson: In my
opinion, there is a big difference from the consumer's
point of view. The difference is the book is completely
open, and you can see everything in it. The computer
program is not open in all areas, and not clear for users
and, sometimes, for engineers. It's a very different
technology and a very different way of presenting
information. In a book, it's clear if it's well done,
even though you may disagree over ideas. The difference
between reading someone's opinion in a book, and opening
up a web page with experiences, pie charts, and
everything else, is tremendous. There is more bandwidth.
It is so much bigger than a book. The impact of images
and such are more unknown.
The other aspect that isn't in a book
is the ability to tailor information the way that you can
on the Net. Now we have to gather data from clinicians,
patients, and other sources, and if we miss some key in
development, then program information could be flawed.
The designer could make mistakes.
Koss: I think
consumers are very skeptical. It's very similar to TV,
video, and such. One important distinction is there are a
lot of books that are basically opinion, basically
inaccurate. And that information will touch somebody, or
will influence somebody.
Jamieson: I don't
think it's fair to compare a bad book with a bad piece of
software. I think it's better if you compare a good book
with a good piece of software. The interactive medium can
let me access at any level if done well. In a book, that
information is collated in a certain way. Unless you are
an academic and can do that, you have to depend on
someone to do it for you. You have to know how to use the
glossary. The interactive environment can give you a
glossary and can help you define words.
Audience: In the
interactive world, it becomes very difficult for people
to see what is advertising and what is not.
Audience: It doesn't
really matter as long as the producer is held liable. So
I don't know how you want to get in the way of regulating
that. It's hard to tell who's liable on the Internet.
Koss: Persons are held
liable if they cause injury, not if they throw out bad
information. There are areas where there is and should be
regulation.
Jamieson: It's Similar
to the issue of freedom of speech. What do you do about
bad speech -- you don't ban it, you put up good speech.
It's the same with the Internet. You have good sources of
information out there. They've had this debate before
each time something new comes out. Let people have access
to a broad spectrum.
Henderson: The problem
is that there used to be a buffer of time. Now I've got
links and hyper access. It happens so fast, with no
buffer, no time to reflect.
Audience: It lends
itself to a very straightforward quality theme. The
better health information sites over time will find it to
their advantage to have some sort of approval. Is that
the direction we're going in?
Koss: That will
naturally evolve. There will be entities that will evolve
like healthfinder.
Jamieson: There will
be bases of information and places that you go to, and
the information providers will be careful with their
links. Institutional places of access will show up.

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