HIE of One

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HIE of One is a free software project that develops tools for patients to manage their own health records.[1] HIE stands for Health Information Exchange, an electronic network for sharing health information across different organizations, hospitals, providers, and patients. It is one of a growing number of tools for encrypted data exchange within the healthcare sector.[2]

Journalist Doc Searls claims that a major structural problem with health care in the United States is that it is paid for by insurance companies and not patients, robbing patients of the power they would normally have as customers in a free market. Searls writes: “The best approach I have seen so far to this challenge is HIE of One, a project of two MDs, Adrian Gropper and Michael Chen.”[3] He notes that HIE of One provides a patient-centered toolkit built around open source software and open data exchange standards.[3] Prof. Phillip Windley, former Chief Information Officer of the State of Utah, noted the positive impact that HIE of One could have on privacy and consent.[4]

A proposal[5] for using HIE of One in conjunction with blockchain technology, was reviewed by the US Office of the National Coordinator (ONC), which awarded it for being innovative, viable, and significant.[6]

The project rests on the premise that patients should authorize the sharing of their health data, instead of leaving these decisions up to hospitals and other healthcare providers who offer generic and opaque disclosure forms. The elements of sharing health data can be broken down into storage, authorization, and transmission. HIE of One has decentralization solutions for each of these elements and provides an open platform on which far more capabilities can be built, such as decision support, analytics, public health efforts, and coordinated health care.

For most of their medical histories, doctors shared minimal information about patients. Before the computer age, a doctor might have a phone conversation with a specialist before sending over a patient or send a few pages of a Continuity of Care Document (CCD) to the next healthcare provider or nursing facility. Many important aspects of treatment were dropped along the way, leading to suboptimal outcomes and duplication of work.

The advent of electronic records theoretically enabled much better care coordination, and the field of health information exchange (HIE) grew up around electronic records. Data sharing currently revolves around large, expensive organizations called Health Information Exchanges and industry-led efforts such as CommonWell. However, such data exchanges have made slow progress, as found in a literature survey by the Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality.[7] Studies cited by that survey found the HIEs hard to use. An official 2016 government study[8] found uneven progress, with a few states succeeding and many lagging.

HIE of One, in contrast, dispenses with these middlemen by allowing each patient to direct the data flow using an automated policy-driven authorization server. Data sharing is carried out through protocols run by the patient and the people to whom she wishes to grant access (doctors, clinical researchers, family members, etc.).

OpenID HEART project developed the protocols forming the basis of HIE of One. HEART grew out of a pair of meetings at the MIT Media Lab in 2014 designed to charter work on adding a healthcare-specific authorization layer to a RESTful API. Once the scope and charter were defined, the workgroup began under the rules of the OpenID Foundation, with industry and government representatives as co-chairs.

Storage

HIE of One's success relies on moving patient data sharing from doctors' offices to patient authorization servers. Most patients use cloud computing for robust data backup and security. However, authorization servers can also be on a stand-alone computer or dedicated appliance at the patient's home, such as a FreedomBox.

Authorization

Transmission

References

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