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Early detection through trending can save thousands of lives

Posted on October 2, 2009 by Dissent

Lucas Mearian reports:

Mining electronic patient data to discover health trends and automate life-saving health alerts for patients and their doctors will be the greatest benefit of electronic medical records (EMR), but a survey released today finds a lack of standards, privacy concerns by hospitals and patients and technology limitations is holding back progress.

Hundreds of billions of gigabytes of health information are now being collected in EMRs, and three-quarters (76%) of more than 700 healthcare executives recently surveyed by PricewaterhouseCoopers LLP agree that mining that information will be their organization’s greatest asset over the next five years, both for saving patient lives and saving money.

Read more in Computerworld

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