A few weeks ago I broke my arm. I went to the emergency room of the nearest hospital, x-rays were taken and the fracture was attended to. While my arm was in the cast it started to hurt badly, and it got worse a few days after the cast had been removed. I had to consider the possibility that the hospital had overlooked another fracture, but I had no access to the x-rays, although I even had paid for. The hospital was not helpful and in the end I had to order another scan from another radiologist (and paid again for it). I was assured all was well, and the new images went into his file - again inaccessible for me.
Since I was born I left a trail of medical documents, scattered across the country and beyond. Nobody feels the necessity to assemble, order and sort them, and nobody has the full overview of my documented medical condition. My medical file is dispersed across paper archives, in local physician IT systems, all in different, incompatible formats - physically available but effectively inaccessible. Many of them have already been destroyed by their keepers after the legal retention period has expired - without my knowledge or approval.
A technical solution is (almost) easy - one central patient file, based and operated on one common technical platform, all physicians, hospitals and caregivers connected, with full oversight by the patient. Every bit of medical information stored in it, and every participant with full insight. The technology required for this central record is available today, many solutions already implemented.
Since I was born I left a trail of medical documents, scattered across the country and beyond. Nobody feels the necessity to assemble, order and sort them, and nobody has the full overview of my documented medical condition. My medical file is dispersed across paper archives, in local physician IT systems, all in different, incompatible formats - physically available but effectively inaccessible. Many of them have already been destroyed by their keepers after the legal retention period has expired - without my knowledge or approval.
A technical solution is (almost) easy - one central patient file, based and operated on one common technical platform, all physicians, hospitals and caregivers connected, with full oversight by the patient. Every bit of medical information stored in it, and every participant with full insight. The technology required for this central record is available today, many solutions already implemented.




















































































