Posts Tagged Google Health

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The Personal Health Record (PHR) is Alive and Well! Meet Zweena.

Smiling Couple with iPadA personal health record (or PHR) is an individual electronic health record that is stored securely on the Internet so it can be accessed by medical providers and caregivers who have permission.

PHRs allow the storage of all critical health history information in one place. In the event of an emergency, the patient, caregiver or family member can give providers access to health information. By having the most current information always available, duplicate or unnecessary tests can be avoided as can possible drug interactions. This benefit is achieved without having to rely on the memory or incomplete records of the patient. PHRs also allow patients, caregivers or third-party vendors to update information regularly over the Internet so that new data can always be accessed by stakeholders.

Although Personal Health Records have been around for more than 10 years, they have gained little traction. Amidst a healthcare environment that is increasingly supportive of the empowered patient, most patients have neither the time nor the knowledge to enter their own records into a PHR. Many PHRs can interface with an individual hospital or physician’s EHR system, but most are unable to share information bi-directionally with more than one entity or flow seamlessly into a Health Information Exchange (HIE).

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Posted in: Electronic Medical Records, Innovation, Learn This: Technology Answers

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Google Health’s Newest Version Makes Personal Health Records Accessible to Visually Impaired Users

Google Health announced today that the newest version of its patient-managed medical record is accessible to visually-impaired users.  Using voice prompts and auditory icons, users of assistive technology are now able to open Google Health profiles and populate them with their own medical information including vitals, conditions, medications, allergies, procedures, test results and immunizations.

Assistive technology such as screen readers, which translate  text into speech or text into Braille, offer computer access to the blind, visually impaired and illiterate.

Writing about the launch of Google Health’s newest enhancement, Google Blogger and Research Scientist T.V. Raman, notes that

“Google Health gives me a single unified web interface to manage all of my health-related information. Kudos to the Google Health and GWT teams for creating an extremely useful and usable solution!”

T.V. Raman is also the author of Emacspeak, a speech interface available free on the Internet that allows visually-impaired users to access computer applications, including video gaming.  T.V. Raman, himself a visually-impaired user, discusses the software requirements to use the Google Health.

“Note that the accessibility support in Google Health requires support from both the browser as well as the adaptive technology in use. At present, we recommend Firefox 3.0 with screenreaders that support ARIA, alternatively, you can also use Fire Vox, the self-voicing extension to Firefox 3.0.”

In addition to improving accessibility for users, Google Health continues to seek relationships with innovators in healthcare, including those developing applications for disease management, secure messaging, and research.

Look at Google Health here.

Posted in: Innovation

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