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Engaging Consumers
 
 

 

Engaging Consumers: Principles

The following principles, strategies and actions are designed to catalyze the development of health IT applications and the flow of information to support them in a way that emphasizes the fullest possible engagement of consumers in their own healthcare.

  1. Consumer Engagement in Healthcare: Engaging consumers is critical in improving healthcare safety, equity, timeliness, quality, efficiency, and patient-centeredness. Health IT and health information exchange should support informed consumer action and decision-making about health and healthcare, in partnership with providers. The absence of health IT and health information exchange serves as a barrier to achieving these goals. In addition, consumers need clear information, shaped by their input, about health IT, health information exchange, and how to participate more fully in their own health and healthcare.

  2. Consumer Access and Control of Personal Health Information: Consumers have the right to access all of their personal health information in an understandable form, as well as to annotate and request corrections to this information. Providers, payers and others who hold personal electronic health information have an obligation to make that information readily accessible or to facilitate its availability to the consumer. Individuals should be able to limit when and with whom their identifiably personal health information is shared.

  3. Consumer Access to Electronic Health Information Tools and Services: Tools that engage consumers through the mobilization of electronic health information should be universally available to consumers regardless of whether or not they have health insurance, serve consumers’ varied needs, be integrated in the delivery of care and conveniently available outside of care delivery settings. These tools should also be designed explicitly to meet the needs of diverse groups including the economically and geographically underserved, disabled, older, and culturally diverse populations.

  4. Consumer Privacy: Consumers have a right to privacy of their personal health information, consistent with all applicable federal, state and local law. (See also additional principles in Privacy, Security and Confidentiality.)

  5. Consumer Trust: Consumers must be able to trust that their personal electronic health information is kept and used, with appropriate consent, in a secure, reliable and auditable manner. All stakeholders in healthcare who handle personal health information must make their policies regarding privacy and information use public, understandable and easily accessible.

  6. Consumer Participation and Transparency: All entities that govern, oversee, operate and/or create policy for the electronic exchange of health information should be transparent and open to meaningful consumer participation.