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11 Jun
2019-06-11 - 2019-06-13    
All Day
HIMSS and Health 2.0 European Conference Helsinki, Finland 11-13 June 2019 The HIMSS & Health 2.0 European Conference will be a unique three day event you [...]
7th Epidemiology and Public Health Conference
2019-06-17 - 2019-06-18    
All Day
Time : June 17-18, 2019 Dubai, UAE Theme: Global Health a major topic of concern in Epidemiology Research and Public Health study Epidemiology Meet 2019 in [...]
Inaugural Digital Health Pharma Congress
2019-06-17 - 2019-06-21    
All Day
Inaugural Digital Health Pharma Congress Join us for World Pharma Week 2019, where 15th Annual Biomarkers & Immuno-Oncology World Congress and 18th Annual World Preclinical Congress, two of Cambridge [...]
International Forum on Advancements in Healthcare - IFAH USA 2019
2019-06-18 - 2019-06-20    
All Day
International Forum on Advancements in Healthcare - IFAH (formerly Smart Health Conference) USA, will bring together 1000+ healthcare professionals from across the world on a [...]
Annual Congress on  Yoga and Meditation
2019-06-20 - 2019-06-21    
All Day
About Conference With the support of Organizing Committee Members, “Annual Congress on Yoga and Meditation” (Yoga Meditation 2019) is planned to be held in Dubai, [...]
Collaborative Care & Health IT Innovations Summit
2019-06-23 - 2019-06-25    
All Day
Technology Integrating Pre-Acute and LTPAC Services into the Healthcare and Payment EcosystemsHyatt Regency Inner Harbor 300 Light Street, Baltimore, Maryland, United States of America, 21202 [...]
2019 AHA LEADERSHIP SUMMIT
2019-06-25 - 2019-06-27    
All Day
Welcome Welcome to attendee registration for the 27th Annual AHA/AHA Center for Health Innovation Leadership Summit! The 2019 AHA Leadership Summit promotes a revolution in thinking [...]
Events on 2019-06-11
11 Jun
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2019 AHA LEADERSHIP SUMMIT
25 Jun 19
San Diego
Latest News

Congress must tackle patient matching amid COVID-19, says Pew Charitable Trusts

Congress must tackle patient matching amid COVID-19, says Pew Charitable Trusts

For all the controversy surrounding the “reopening” of society during the ongoing public health emergency, it remains a stubborn fact that there’s no getting back any safe sense of new normal without widespread contact tracing and, eventually, a safe and widely-administered vaccine. But there’s a major and longstanding hurdle to accomplishing either of those goals: the challenge of accurate patient matching.

In a letter this week to House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, D-California, Minority Leader Kevin McCarthy, R-California, Senate Majority Leader Mitch McConnel, R-Kentucky, and Senate Minority Leader Chuck Schumer, D-New York, Pew Charitable Trusts again made the case that Congress should act. Detailed contact tracing in the short term and a nationwide vaccination program in the long term “hinge on having correct patient demographic data,” according to the letter, but “current flaws in the identification and matching of patient records inhibit the nation’s ability to accomplish these efforts successfully.”

The need for better patient matching is a drum that Pew has been beating for a long time – including in a recent HIMSS20 Digital presentation, in which it explored the potential for biometric technology to help. And it’s hardly the first time Congress has been called upon by other healthcare industry groups to exercise its authority to help solve the longstanding challenge of patient ID. In this new May 4 letter to Capitol Hill, Pew seizes on the coronavirus crisis as an object lesson showing the need to get these vexing matching challenges finally fixed.

“As Congress looks to enhance the nation’s capacity to respond to this pandemic, improving patient matching will be critical,” said Ben Moscovitch, project director for health information technology at the Pew Charitable Trusts. “Congress should work with federal agencies – such as the Office of the National Coordinator for Health Information Technology and the U.S. Postal Service – to ensure that they are using all the available tools they have so that public health entities can effectively trace contacts and track immunizations,” he said.

Currently, said Mosvovitch public health workers simply “lack key information needed to effectively identify and communicate with COVID-19 positive individuals.” He pointed to the fact that phone numbers aren’t often exchanged between labs and public health authorities who could do contact tracing. In many cases, even if they are, the numbers are for ordering physicians, not patients.

“As a result, contact tracers spend indispensable time searching for a phone number or email address to contact an individual,” he said, “all while the virus may be spreading by unknowingly infected individuals that have not been reached via contact tracing mechanisms.” And even in the hopeful case that a safe and effective vaccine were to be developed, faster than one ever has before, there could “initially limited supply and [it] may require multiple doses to take effect,” said Moscovitch.

Any large-scale nationwide vaccination program would depend on robust and reliable data, offering insights into which citizens have been inoculated and which have yet to receive the vaccine. In a nation with nearly 48,000 people named John Smith, that effort would face obvious challenges along the way. “The effectiveness of immunization registries relies on the ability for health care professionals to locate the right record.To do so, they use demographic data – such as name, date of birth, and address,” said Moscovitch.

“However, a variety of factors can influence the identification of the right record, including typos and information that changes over time. These challenges with patient matching have long been documented throughout health care; for example, research has shown that patient matching rates between hospitals can be as low as 50%.”

In the letter, Pew calls on Congress to support standardization and expansion of data elements to enable more efficient contact tracing and effective immunization. The government should encourage common use of more demographic data elements – phone numbers, email addresses, previous addresses – as has been called for by ONC. While more than 240 million Americans have email addresses, for example, and they’re already captured in more than half of EHRs, they’re “typically not used for matching,” said Moscovitch.

And standardization of more common data elements such as addresses and phone numbers, across provider health IT systems, public health agencies and immunization registries is also a major opportunity. “Research has shown that standardizing specific data elements can improve match rates,” said Moscovitch, “which could result in tens of thousands of additional correct record linkages per day. An organization with a match rate of 85%, for example, could see its unlinked records reduced by 20% with standardization of address alone.” While most immunization registry systems use consistent USPS address format, EHRs and other provider IT networks don’t, necessarily. Convening on a standard format could boost data quality and matching rates.

“The COVID-19 pandemic has highlighted the gaps in data exchange in health care that has and will continue to inhibit the nation’s response to this,and future pandemics,if they remain unaddressed,” said Moscovitch. “Congress should take robust and immediate actions to ensure that public health authorities have the information they need to contact infected individuals and effectively administer future immunization campaigns.”