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Wal-Mart, partners pilot Dossia PHR

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After more than a year of wrangling--and one initial development effort gone bad--Wal-Mart and a team of fellow corporate giants are finally pilot-testing Dossia, their massive PHR effort. Right now, the pilot is tiny, including only about 20 Wal-Mart employees and an equally small handful of employees within the other partner firms. But the Dossia partners, who also include Applied Materials, AT&T, Pitney Bowes, Cardinal Health and Sanofi-Aventis, ultimately hope to extend the PHR to more than a million employees and dependents. The PHR technology used by Dossia is based on Indivo, an open-source PHR system developed by Children's Hospital Boston in 1998.

Founders of Dossia must be relieved that they're finally getting into beta testing. The project had originally gotten off to a difficult start when the group's relationship with its original main development contractor, Omnimedix, fell apart in a welter of court actions.

To find out more about the pilot:
- read this Information Week piece

Related Articles:
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Huge employee health record effort in jeopardy. Report
Promoting PHR use: Is it a good idea? Report
Blue plans, health industry group plan PHR. Report
Banks to offer help in PHR dissemination. Report
A Google vision for health data. Report

Comments

Omnimedix Institute and its founder are in the forefront of all of the important policy related work on health care information and patient privacy. So it is with dismay that we see the Dossia consortium moving away from that partnership, to work on a system in which the employer looks more likely to access the patient data, if not now, in future. And the way Dossia did this has been troubling as well, with bad business practices already showing up -- this doesn't bode well for the future of Dossia or of patient privacy. Policymakers and business owners, as well as employees, should take note.

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