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Forbes Healthcare Summit
2017-11-29 - 2017-11-30    
All Day
ForbesLive leverages unique access to the world’s most influential leaders, policy-makers, entrepreneurs, and artists—uniting these global forces to harness their collective knowledge, address today’s critical [...]
29th Annual National Forum on Quality Improvement in Health Care
2017-12-10 - 2017-12-13    
All Day
PROGRAM OVERVIEW The IHI National Forum on December 10–13​, 2017, will bring more than 5,000 brilliant minds in health care to Orla​​ndo, Florida, to find meaningful connections [...]
Dallas Health IT Summit
2017-12-14 - 2017-12-15    
All Day
About Health IT Summits U.S. healthcare is at an inflection point right now, as policy mandates and internal healthcare system reform begin to take hold, [...]
Events on 2017-11-29
Forbes Healthcare Summit
29 Nov 17
New York
Events on 2017-12-14
Dallas Health IT Summit
14 Dec 17
Dallas
Articles Latest News

HHS to Add Medicare, Medicaid Data to Autism Platform

EMR Industry
  • The Department of Health and Human Services (HHS) is launching an initiative to enhance autism and chronic conditions understanding using data integration.

  • The initiative centralizes vast amounts of personal medical and behavioral data, raising concerns about its potential exploitation and security.

  • Medicare and Medicaid claims data, which includes detailed patient information, forms the backbone of HHS’s new research platform.

  • Claims data, covering a broad population, provides a comprehensive snapshot of a person’s healthcare journey, raising privacy concerns.

  • The platform will integrate EHRs, real-time patient-centered documents, potentially turning them into highly detailed medical dossiers for research purposes.

  • Adding wearable data introduces concerns about continuous behavioral data being used for surveillance, potentially without clinical context or oversight.

  • The platform may include private sources like Fitbit or Apple, but participants may not fully understand the scope of data sharing.

  • NIH’s “All of Us” program collects wearable data, indicating that once centralized, data systems tend to expand rather than shrink.

  • The platform will incorporate immutable genomic and lab results, raising concerns about the permanent storage of sensitive genetic data.

  • The U.S. Constitution didn’t envision centralized health data storage; states already run effective surveillance programs with local oversight.

  • Expanding autism research doesn’t require a massive federal system, as existing programs already collect meaningful data with ethical guidelines.

  • A national platform with no clear limits or oversight could create long-term surveillance risks, with potentially unintended consequences.

  • History shows that once surveillance powers are granted, they tend to expand, increasing the risk of data misuse and control.

  • Centralizing genomic and behavioral data raises concerns about creating a surveillance tool for profiling, control, or political purposes.