Imagine: EMRs Without Big Brother

I now have more health information on my wrist than my doctor had about me 10 years ago … The watch records my daily runs, including distance and pace, along with pulse and calories burned. The pedometer measures how many steps I take each day, and if I wear it on my wrist at night it can also measure the length and quality of my sleep. Both devices transmit their results wirelessly to my computer whenever I walk by it, and that information, too, is automatically deposited into my health record.

My online record thus contains an extraordinarily rich array of information about how much I exercise, how well I sleep, my blood pressure and my body mass. It also pulls data on my prescriptions and other more traditional health metrics, such as blood-test results.

As I write this, I’m wearing something called a VITAband, which is an emergency ID bracelet that is linked to online information about who I am, my allergies, my blood type, whom to contact in case of an emergency and so on. Importantly, with appropriate permission, it can also tap into my increasingly detailed online health record.

Full Peter Orszag Bloomberg piece is worth reading. He worries that access to this technology will be unequal. That’s why he’s a liberal.

Comments (6)

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  1. Bruce says:

    Markets work. But they don’t give every consumer the same amount of every good.

  2. Devon Herrick says:

    He worries about unequal access to this technology. However, I suspect the people he worries about don’t actually want these devices. Lack of health literacy and indifference about healthy behaviors means some people will be unhealthy. These devices are unlikely to change that. The people who are already motivated to use these devices are the ones who would have been healthy regardless.

  3. Madeline says:

    Interesting. And significant that the market didn’t need government to produce these things.

  4. Stacey says:

    I am sure that EMRs will be much better without big brother.

  5. Joe Barnett says:

    Citigroup is certainly getting mileage out of Orzag; though what his position as Vice Chair of Global Banking has to do with health care is puzzling.

  6. Carla Sauer says:

    I am of a certain age and live alone, I unfortunately need Big Brother. Healthcare is most definitely NOT equal, and it shoul be, I don’t have the answer.