This wiki has undergone a migration to Confluence found Here
<meta name="googlebot" content="noindex">

September 2018 Baltimore CCDE Connectathon Track 3

From HL7Wiki
Revision as of 20:34, 29 October 2018 by Kathleenconnor (talk | contribs)
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Back to Security Meetings Back to FHIR Consumer Centered Data Exchange (CCDE) Connectathons ===

For Baltimore 201809 Connectathon, the CCDE Connectathon Track integrated into the Care Plan and Clinical Reasoning Tracks See 201809 Care Plan wiki

  • 201809 Connectathon video for the integrated Care Plan, Clinical Reasoning, and Consumer Mediated Exchange tracks, which featured a Break the Glass scenario. Break glass scenario demonstrated a technical approach to balancing patient safety with patient privacy. Betsy, the starring persona, used a FHIR consent directive to restrict access to her mental health care plan by all of her multiple distributed care teams other than her mental health provider and CDS'.
  • Betsy's endocrinologist is about to order an opioid to treat her diabetic neuropathy pain based on her medication list, which masked the mental health medication, Xanax based on her consent directive. The endocrinologist's CDS throws a drug-drug counter indication warning based on a CDS Hooks card.
  • The warning gives two options to the endocrinologist, either Break the Glass with notice about being audited or to ask the patient if there are medications that are not shown on the medication list. If the provider takes the Break the Glass option, the endocrinologist will be shown her mental medication list, which includes Xanax and a recommendation to prescribe Gabapentin instead.
  • If the endocrinologist takes the second option, he will explain to Betsy that there is a potential drug-drug counter indication. The endocrinologist then asks if there are some medications that Betsy hasn't authorized him to see. Betsy decides to tell him about her mental health prescription for Xanax. Using her mobile app for Right of Access directives, she directs the app to only retrieve her mental health medications from either her mental health provider's EHR or optionally from those records that are accessible through the mental health provider's HIE. Because Betsy is exercising her Right of Access on her own behalf rather than delegating that right to a third party app to exercise on her behalf, she does not need a signed Right of Access directive. So in this case, a simple click on the app's OAuth authorization button is sufficient. The app returns her mental health medication list, which indicates that Xanax is her currently prescribed anti-anxiety and antidepression medication to treat late onset PTSD related to combat. The provider then requests a list of alternative non-opioid medications for diabetic neuropathy pain. CDS-Hooks returns Gabapentin as a recommended alternative pain medication. The endocrinologist discusses this with Betsy and she agrees to try Gabapentin instead.

Back to Security Main Page