The discount retailer is the first member of the Dossia employer coalition -- which suffered some legal and development setbacks last year -- to offer the consortium's personal health record (PHR) system in volume to employees.
Nonprofit organization Dossia was launched in December 2006 by Wal-Mart, Intel, and the other large employers for the creation of a secure, Web-based infrastructure to provide patient-controlled, electronic PHRs to more than 2.5 million workers, retirees, and their dependents.
Colin Evans, CEO and president of Dossia, who's also director of policy and standards for Intel's health group but is "on loan" from Intel full-time to the consortium, said that while Wal-Mart is the first Dossia player to roll out the PHRs to employees, other coalition members will begin offering them next year. "The pipeline is mapped out for '09; we've got a dance card," he said.
Wal-Mart is offering the e-PHRs as a voluntary benefit that employees can sign up for during the fall open enrollment process, with access to the PHRs beginning in January, said Sarah Clark, Wal-Mart's VP of benefits. So far the response from Wal-Mart employees -- who were first told about the upcoming PHR offering earlier this year -- has been "very good," said Clark. "We'd love to have everyone have a personal health record," she said, declining to disclose what Wal-Mart's actual internal goal is for employee sign-up. "Our goal is to provide our associates with resources they need to make better health decisions," she said in an interview with InformationWeek.
"The records are personal, private, and portable," said Clark, explaining that neither Wal-Mart nor other third parties have access to the PHR data, and that workers can still access the information if they leave Wal-Mart's employment.
Clark acknowledged that workers at companies like Wal-Mart have an increasing number of options in creating e-PHRs as companies like Google, Microsoft, Revolution Health, and others roll out PHR offerings to consumers. In the bigger picture, Clark said it really doesn't matter whether some Wal-Mart employees choose to use one of those other options, like Google or Microsoft PHRs, instead of Dossia's. What is key, she said, is that workers keep track of their health information to help them make better health decisions.
The philosophy behind the Dossia companies offering e-health records to their workers is this: Providing individuals access to their own health data -- which is generally scattered thoughout the nation's health system -- will encourage employees and their families to be more proactive in their care, helping them make better health care and wellness decisions, live healthier lives, and, among other things, avoid expensive complications associated with chronic diseases. The hope of Dossia members is to ultimately curb soaring health care benefit costs by empowering their workers with access to their own health data.
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Dossia's Past Roadblocks, Future Goals
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