
New medicare tool to enhance health records access
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Medicare officials on Tuesday announced the launch of the next generation of technology designed to allow patients to share an array of medical information with doctors and other health care
providers. Blue Button 2.0 is intended to empower Medicare beneficiaries by giving them more information and control over who gets access to their health data. Blue Button, which began in
2010, allows patients to download a copy of their claims data. The upgraded version will let them download and share a wider array of information. For example, beneficiaries will have access
to four years of data from Medicare parts A, B and D as well as prescriptions, primary-care treatments and procedures that they can share with providers. The information may help prevent
unnecessary testing and encourage continuity of care, say officials from the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services (CMS). “Having access to their medical information will help them make
decisions about their care and have a better understanding of their health,” Seema Verma, administrator of the CMS, said Tuesday in a speech in Las Vegas. Only beneficiaries enrolled in
traditional Medicare will have access to Blue Button 2.0, but Verma called on all health care insurers to give their members access to their claims data in a digital format. “Today, we are
calling on private health plans to join us in sharing their data with patients, because enabling patients to control their Medicare data so that they can quickly obtain and share it is
critical to creating more patient empowerment,” she said in her prepared remarks. Blue Button 2.0 is part of MyHealthEData, a government-wide initiative Verma also announced Tuesday that is
designed to give all Americans more control over their health data and provide researchers with vital information. The initiatives are intended to help doctors and other health care
providers get a patient’s entire medical history, not just disjointed pieces of it, so they can better coordinate care. “MyHealthEData will unleash data to trigger innovation and advance
research to cure diseases and provide more evidence-based treatment guidelines that ultimately will drive down costs and improve health outcomes,” Verma said. These initiatives are expected
to bolster research by encouraging Medicare’s millions of patients to share their data with those conducting medical studies. Developers, using mock patient data, are working on apps to
build the software needed for the tool. CMS officials did not say when these apps will be available to beneficiaries. When fully up and running, Blue Button 2.0 will be available to Medicare
beneficiaries through their accounts at MyMedicare.gov. For security reasons, the system won’t transmit Social Security or Medicare numbers or the patients’ dates of birth.