Survey: Online record access outweighs privacy risk
The majority (69 percent) of U.S. consumers with chronic health conditions believe patients should have the right to access all of their healthcare information, and 51 percent believe that accessing their medical records online outweighs the privacy risks, according to an Accenture survey.
Accenture surveyed 2,011 individuals, 918 healthy and 1,093 with 11 chronic conditions--asthma, arthritis, cancer, chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD), depression, diabetes, heart disease, hypertension, clinically diagnosed obesity, osteoporosis and stroke--and found the chronic patients were slightly less concerned about the privacy of their EMR (65 percent) than they were about other personal information that is stored digitally, such as online banking (70 percent), in-store credit card use (69 percent) and online shopping (68 percent).
Even though they are eager to have access to their online medical records, 55 percent of those with chronic conditions said the top barrier to accessing their records was not knowing how to do so.
Beyond accessing medical data, the vast majority (87 percent) of U.S. consumers want to control their health data, but 55 percent believe they currently do not have very much control or any control over their medical information. The survey also showed that, depending on the type of chronic illness they have, there are differences in a person's ability to exercise some level of control over his or her healthcare data. For example, 65 percent of consumers with heart disease reported having some level of control compared to only 49 percent of individuals with COPD.
The rising population of chronic patients remains an area of growing concern, as the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention estimates that 47 percent of Americans have at least one chronic disease, yet they account for 76 percent of all physician visits. Accenture's findings show, however, that these individuals are actively engaged at most stages of patient care, including during medical diagnosis (91 percent), managing treatment (87 percent) and maintaining general health on a day-to-day basis (84 percent).
"Healthcare will need to adapt to a new generation of individuals who are taking a more proactive role in managing their health and expect to have transparency," said Kaveh Safavi, MD, JD, who leads Accenture's global health business. "As consumers continue to demand more access to their personal data online, we expect that patients will gain more power to manage some aspects of their own care. This will not only make healthcare more effective but also more affordable, as consumers doing more for themselves will free up the system to be more productive."