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Welcome to the nexus of ethics, psychology, morality, technology, health care, and philosophy
Showing posts with label Access to Medical Information Online. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Access to Medical Information Online. Show all posts

Monday, April 18, 2016

Bathroom Bills, Bigotry, and Bioethics

Elizabeth Dietz
The Hastings Center Bioethics Forum blog
March 31, 2016

Here is an excerpt:

HB 2 should incite the worry, and the anger, of bioethicists on several fronts. It is unclear how transgender people could even comply with the letter of the law, let alone its spirit. When transgender men who are read as men – but whose birth certificates say “female”–- are compelled to use the women’s restroom, this creates precisely the “problem,”- i.e., the idea of men invading a women’s only space, that the law purports to protect against. The law’s defenders have invented an imaginary threat to shore up support for the legislation, insisting that women are endangered if transgender women, who are routinely misgendered as “men” in this rhetoric, are allowed to share these spaces. While a 2013 survey by the Williams Institute of UCLA School of Law found that “roughly 70% of trans people have reported being denied entrance, assaulted or harassed while trying to use a restroom,” there is no evidence of violence perpetrated by transgender people in restrooms.

The article is here.

Saturday, December 1, 2012

Online Patient Access to Records May Boost Visits


By John Gever, Senior Editor
MedPage Today
Published: November 20, 2012


Patients with access to their physicians' electronic health record systems had more office visits, hospital admissions, and emergency room encounters than those without such access, researchers said.

Participants in a Kaiser Permanente program giving them access to their electronic records, including a secure email system for communicating with clinicians, showed significant increases in nearly all measures of healthcare utilization, relative to the period before they joined the program, Ted E. Palen, MD, PhD, MSPH, of Kaiser Permanente Colorado in Denver, and colleagues reported in the Nov. 20 issue of the Journal of the American Medical Association.

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In an accompanying editorial, two researchers at Brigham and Women's Hospital in Boston noted that the study findings stood in contrast to Kaiser investigations in other regions, which had found reductions in utilization associated with so-called patient portals to electronic health records.

The entire story is here.