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CMAJ
CMAJ - June 13, 2000JAMC - le 13 juin 2000

eHealth activity slow, but major growth may be on horizon

CMAJ 2000;162:1728


It is just a matter of time before rising health care costs force changes in the way medical records are kept, the CEO of a Canadian high-tech company says. "Spending on health care in North America is up to US$1.5 trillion annually, and [much of] that money is wasted because of duplication and inefficient record sharing," says Claude Haw, CEO of an Ottawa company that wants to merge medical and information technology. Haw, who held senior management posts at Mitel Corporation and Newbridge Networks, says "eHealth activity only amounts to about US$250 million worth of activity today but is expected to reach US$3 billion by 2004."

He now heads Mainsource Software Corporation, which developed a program that uses the Web to deliver medical and health care information in different formats to physicians, administrators and patients. It works by "tagging" information about a patient that is held in laboratory and other databases, including text, videos, MRI scans or any other clinical images, so that it is available on desktop computers.

Haw says this and other eHealth developments are not just fancy tracking devices for bean counters: they have the potential to revolutionize health care for patients. "We could move very quickly to a system where patients have their own smart card and can access their own health record through swipe and PIN [personal identification number], just as they can access their financial records at a bank machine," suggests Dr. Christopher Skinner, the vice-president of product management at Mainsource. Skinner, who has degrees in engineering and medicine and is a clinical neurologist at the Ottawa Hospital, has published and worked extensively in the area of clinical informatics and the impact of informatics on medical education. Just as Canadians are now prepared to pay up to $30 a month for access to the Internet, speculates Skinner, they may soon have the chance to do the same to gain secure access to their own health records.

Skinner says eHealth innovators all face the same problem: inertia within the health care system. "This system could be adopted almost everywhere immediately [because] the technical architecture is easily applied," he says. "The barriers are political." — Charlotte Gray, Ottawa

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