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  2. Health information management - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Health_information_management

    Health information management's standards history is dated back to the introduction of the American Health Information Management Association, founded in 1928 "when the American College of Surgeons established the Association of Record Librarians of North America (ARLNA) to 'elevate the standards of clinical records in hospitals and other medical institutions.'" [3]

  3. Patient tracking system - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patient_tracking_system

    An identification wristband given to a patient at Massachusetts General Hospital. A patient tracking system (also called patient identification system ) allows a healthcare provider to log and monitor the progress of a person through the provision of care during their stay there.

  4. Record linkage - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Record_linkage

    Record linkage is important to social history research since most data sets, such as census records and parish registers were recorded long before the invention of National identification numbers. When old sources are digitized, linking of data sets is a prerequisite for longitudinal study .

  5. Medical privacy - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Medical_privacy

    This "smart" card included an individual's social security number as an important piece of identification that can lead to identity theft if databases are breached. [6] Additionally, there was the fear that people would target these medical cards because they have information that can be of value to many different third parties, including ...

  6. Protected health information - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Protected_health_information

    Names; All geographical identifiers smaller than a state, except for the initial three digits of a zip code if, according to the current publicly available data from the U.S. Bureau of the Census: the geographic unit formed by combining all zip codes with the same three initial digits contains more than 20,000 people; the initial three digits of a zip code for all such geographic units ...

  7. Enterprise master patient index - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Enterprise_master_patient...

    Healthcare organizations and groups use EMPI to identify, match, merge, de-duplicate, and cleanse patient records to create a master index that may be used to obtain a complete and single view of a patient. The EMPI will create a unique identifier for each patient and maintain a mapping to the identifiers used in each records' respective system.

  8. ASTM E1714 - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Astm_e1714

    Universal: Can support patient identification for the entire world population [1] Incremental Implementation: The Sample UHID can be implemented on an incremental basis. With the development and use of appropriate procedures and establishment of the necessary bidirectional mapping, both the Sample UHID and existing patient identifiers can co ...

  9. Caldicott Report - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Caldicott_Report

    The Caldicott Committee's Report on the Review of Patient-Identifiable Information, usually referred to as the Caldicott Report, was a review commissioned in 1997 by the Chief Medical Officer of England due to increasing worries concerning the use of patient information in the National Health Service (NHS) in England and Wales and the need to avoid the undermining of confidentiality because of ...