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Health Information Professionals in a Global eHealth World: Ethical and legal arguments for the international certification and accreditation of health information professionals

•eHealth has resulted in a fundamental change in the ethical standing of health information professionals (HIPs) because they have acquired a fiduciary standing towards patients that they did not have before.•The2003 IMIA Code of Ethics needs to be revised to take accounts of this fact.•Correspondin...

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Published in:International journal of medical informatics (Shannon, Ireland) Ireland), 2017-01, Vol.97, p.261-265
Main Author: Kluge, Eike-Henner W.
Format: Article
Language:English
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Summary:•eHealth has resulted in a fundamental change in the ethical standing of health information professionals (HIPs) because they have acquired a fiduciary standing towards patients that they did not have before.•The2003 IMIA Code of Ethics needs to be revised to take accounts of this fact.•Correspondingly, ethical rules for eHealth corporations should be revised to avoid ethical and professional problems for HIPs.•A possible solution in terms of accreditation and certification is outlined. Issues such as privacy, security, quality, etc. have received considerable attention in discussions of eHealth, mHealth and pHealth. However, comparatively little attention has been paid to the fact that these methods of delivering health care situate Health Information Professionals (HIPs) in an ethical context that is importantly different from that of traditional health care because they assign a fiduciary role to HIPs that they did not have before, their previous technical involvement notwithstanding. Even less attention has been paid to the fact that when these methods of health care delivery are interjurisdictional, they situate HIPs in an ethical fabric that does not exist in the intra-jurisdictional setting. Privacy and other informatic patient rights in the context of traditional health care are identified and the role that HIPs play in this connection is analysed and distinguished from the role HIPs play in eHealth in order to determine whether the 2002 IMIA Code of Ethics provides sufficient guidance for HIPs in eHealth and associated settings. The position of inter-jurisdictional corporate eHealth providers is also touched upon. It is found that in eHealth, mHealth and pHealth the ethical and legal position of HIPs differs importantly from that in traditional technologically-assisted health care because HIPs have fiduciary obligations they did not have before. It is also found that the 2002 IMIA Code of Ethics, which provides the framework for the codes of ethics that are promulgated by its various member organizations, provides insufficient guidance for dealing with issues that arise in this connection because they do not acknowledge this important change. It is also found that interjurisdictional eHealth etc. raises new ethical and legal issues for the corporate sector that transcend contractual arrangements. The 2002 IMIA Code of Ethics should be revised and updated to provide guidance for HIPs who are engaged in eHealth and related methods of health care del
ISSN:1386-5056
1872-8243
DOI:10.1016/j.ijmedinf.2016.10.020