University of Wollongong
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National electronic health records and the digital disruption of moral orders

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posted on 2024-11-16, 06:43 authored by Karin Garrety, Ian McLoughlin, Rob Wilson, Gregor Zelle, Mike Martin
The digitalisation of patient health data to provide national electronic health record systems (NEHRS) is a major objective of many governments. Proponents claim that NEHRS will streamline care, reduce mistakes and cut costs. However, building these systems has proved highly problematic. Using recent developments in Australia as an example, we argue that a hitherto unexamined source of difficulty concerns the way NEHRS disrupt the moral orders governing the production, ownership, use of and responsibility for health records. Policies that pursue digitalisation as a self-evident 'solution' to problems in healthcare without due regard to these disruptions risk alienating key stakeholders. We propose a more emergent approach to the development and implementation of NEHRS that supports moral re-ordering around rights and responsibilities appropriate to the intentions of those involved in healthcare relationships.

Funding

Generating insights for the future: A retrospective, comparative study of attempts to implement large-scale electronic health record systems

Australian Research Council

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History

Citation

Garrety, K., McLoughlin, I., Wilson, R. G., Zelle, G. & Martin, M. (2014). National electronic health records and the digital disruption of moral orders. Social Science and Medicine, 101 70-77.

Journal title

Social science & medicine (1982)

Volume

101

Pagination

70-77

Language

English

RIS ID

86571

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