Recent findings have shown that the continued expansion of the scope and scale of data collected in electronic health records are making the protection of personally identifiable information (PII) more challenging and may inadvertently put our institutions and patients at risk if not addressed. As clinical terminologies expand to include new terms that may capture PII (e.g., Patient First Name, Patient Phone Number), institutions may start using them in clinical data capture (and in some cases, they already have). Once in use, PII-containing values associated with these terms may find their way into laboratory or observation data tables via extract-transform-load jobs intended to process structured data, putting institutions at risk of unin...
Abstract: Personal health record, or PHR, is a health record where health data and information relat...
Background: With the growing adoption of electronic medical records, there are increasing demands f...
This chapter explores the benefits and limitations of personal health records (PHRs) as a tool to pr...
Many organisations create, store, or purchase information that links individuals\u27 identities to o...
De-identification methods have helped government organizations provide the public with useful inform...
<p>Many organisations create, store, or purchase information that links individuals’ identities to o...
Often organizations release and receive medical data with all explicit identifiers, such as name, ad...
Summary: The presence of personally identifiable information (PII) in natural language portions of e...
A multilingual terminology for discussing safety by information minimization such as namelessness, u...
The challenge of securing large amounts of electronic medical records stored in a variety of forms a...
There is increasing investment in large-scale repositories of clinical data, sometimes as a direct r...
Protecting personally identifiable information is important in clinical research. The authors, two f...
Healthcare is a major industry in the Smarter Planet initiative of IBM and a key area where analytic...
Objective: De-identified clinical data in standardized form (eg, diagnosis codes), derived from elec...
Personally identifiable information (PII) is one of the most central concepts in information privacy...
Abstract: Personal health record, or PHR, is a health record where health data and information relat...
Background: With the growing adoption of electronic medical records, there are increasing demands f...
This chapter explores the benefits and limitations of personal health records (PHRs) as a tool to pr...
Many organisations create, store, or purchase information that links individuals\u27 identities to o...
De-identification methods have helped government organizations provide the public with useful inform...
<p>Many organisations create, store, or purchase information that links individuals’ identities to o...
Often organizations release and receive medical data with all explicit identifiers, such as name, ad...
Summary: The presence of personally identifiable information (PII) in natural language portions of e...
A multilingual terminology for discussing safety by information minimization such as namelessness, u...
The challenge of securing large amounts of electronic medical records stored in a variety of forms a...
There is increasing investment in large-scale repositories of clinical data, sometimes as a direct r...
Protecting personally identifiable information is important in clinical research. The authors, two f...
Healthcare is a major industry in the Smarter Planet initiative of IBM and a key area where analytic...
Objective: De-identified clinical data in standardized form (eg, diagnosis codes), derived from elec...
Personally identifiable information (PII) is one of the most central concepts in information privacy...
Abstract: Personal health record, or PHR, is a health record where health data and information relat...
Background: With the growing adoption of electronic medical records, there are increasing demands f...
This chapter explores the benefits and limitations of personal health records (PHRs) as a tool to pr...