Whyte Martin B, Kelly Philip A
King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK and University of Surrey, Guildford, UK.
King's College Hospital NHS Foundation Trust, London, UK.
Future Healthc J. 2022 Jul;9(2):188-189. doi: 10.7861/fhj.2022-0001.
The electronic health record has dramatically improved the safety of medical care as well as the clarity and accessibility of the notes. An equally profound, but under-recognised consequence, is the effect it has had on 'patient ownership' and responsibility within the hospital. It is now very easy to access and read through patients notes, from a distance and at scale, to identify patients for attention. Automated alerts can be set for quantitative laboratory or physiological variables, for the same purpose, and artificial intelligence is being developed for alerts based on free text or radiographic interpretation. This article explores the risk of this approach to healthcare and the danger of a 'collusion of anonymity', whereby responsibility for care is sufficiently diffuse that no one has ownership of a patient's care.
电子健康记录极大地提高了医疗护理的安全性以及病历记录的清晰度和可获取性。一个同样深刻但未得到充分认识的后果是,它对医院内的“患者自主权”和责任产生了影响。现在,从远处大规模地访问和查阅患者病历以确定需要关注的患者变得非常容易。出于同样的目的,可以针对定量实验室或生理变量设置自动警报,并且正在开发基于自由文本或影像学解读的人工智能警报。本文探讨了这种医疗保健方式的风险以及“匿名共谋”的危险,即护理责任足够分散,以至于没有人对患者的护理负责。