Power to the Patient: Mount Sinai Puts Medical Records Snapshot on Smart Cards
At New York's Mount Sinai Medical Center, an innovative program gives patients a personal medical snapshot on an encrypted smart card. The goals: Improve quality of care, reduce records mistakes, and speed revenue collection. Is this part of the future for your health records?
The records clean-up went well, Contino says. But three years later, the problem was back. The IT team became convinced of the need for a better system to register patients, and began exploring an idea that has now turned into a pioneering smart card system.
Today, Mount Sinai patients participating in the pilot test can choose to carry a "personal health card." This encrypted smart card with 64K of memory holds not only the patient's name, photo, and insurance information, but also a medical history snapshot, including notes on allergies, medications, recent treatment data, and even in some cases, a compressed EKG test result. The goal is to distribute 100,000 cards in the initial pilot project, Contino says.
Mount Sinai's registration staffers can use the cards to check in patients quickly and accurately; emergency room triage nurses can use the cards for quick access to relevant patient data.
Mount Sinai, one of the oldest, largest and most prestigious teaching hospitals in the U.S., with 1,171 beds and some 1,800 medical staff, has ambitious goals for the smart card system: It aims toreduce fraud, improve revenue cycles through the reduction of registration errors, and boost quality of patient care.
A smart card bearing a medical snapshot is portable, encrypted for privacy and security, and requires little IT infrastructure to connect facilities ranging from mega-hospitals like Mt. Sinai to community clinics. This is not a replacement system: Today, these hospitals have no efficient way of sharing registration data or urgent care clinical data. For patients, the card has the ability to speed check-in and supply some peace of mind. After all, what patient, arriving at an emergency room such as Mount Sinai's, doesn’t want hospital staff to have immediate access to the correct, key medical facts – even if the patient is not able to speak, or speaking a foreign language, or presenting an ID with a name that hundreds of other New Yorkers share.
Mount Sinai Medical Center



