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Microsoft, Kaiser Permanente Launch E-Health Record Pilot

The program will test the exchange of patient health data from Kaiser Permanente's My Health Manager e-health record system to Microsoft's HealthVault platform.

As the battle to be the leading purveyor of consumers' Web-based personal health record tools heats up, Microsoft on Monday announced a pilot program with Kaiser Permanente, the nation's largest health maintenance organization, which launched its own e-medical record program for millions of patients a few years ago.

The Kaiser Permanente and Microsoft pilot program aims to expand functionality to the personal e-health records of Kaiser Permanente employees (who are also Kaiser Permanente patients), while providing to Microsoft a new pool of users as the software vendor demonstrates to consumers at-large how they, too, can manage their health information via Microsoft's HealthVault platform.

The pilot will test the exchange of patient health data from Kaiser Permanente's My Health Manager e-health record system to Microsoft's HealthVault, which Microsoft unveiled last October as a Web-based service providing tools for consumers to manage their own health data and conduct private health-related Web-searches.

The Kaiser Permanente/Microsoft project also comes on the heels of Google last month announcing the general availability of Google personal health record tools.

That Google announcement followed an e-health record pilot launched last year with more than 1,600 Cleveland Clinic patients, who signed on to have their health data from the clinic's e-medical records incorporated into Google personal health record accounts. Last month, the Cleveland Clinic, as well as a few other health-care players, including several large pharmacy chains and lab companies, announced they would also transmit data to Google's Web-based personal health records when patients requested.

Beth Israel Deaconess Medical Center (BIDMC) is among the handful of health-care providers that signed on to provide patient data to Google personal health records. However, the Boston-based medical center -- which also allows patients to access their e-medical data directly from BIDMC via a secure hospital Web site -- isn't playing favorites when it comes to the consumer offerings of personal health record services from Google and Microsoft. BIDMC will support both platforms.

"We've already completed our prototype for HealthVault," said John Halamka, CIO at CareGroup Healthcare System, which operates BIDMC. "I believe patients should be the stewards of their own data and I'm committed to making data available to patients via any secure personal health record system they request," said Halamka in an e-mail interview with InformationWeek.

For its part, Microsoft has been recruiting third parties to develop applications to run on HealthVault, and to date, about 40 such applications have been developed, including those allowing patients to monitor their blood pressure, glucose, and other key readings using personal health devices, and download this info to share with their physicians, says Peter Neupert, Microsoft Health Solutions Group corporate VP.

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