Kaiser Permanente offers up medical records on a USB drive
The drive is encrypted and password-protected
Kaiser Permanente, a nonprofit health care system, is now offering about 3.3 million of its 8.6 million members a USB flash drive that contains their personal medical information.
The read-only drive, designed for use while a person is traveling or during a health emergency, is a sort of stopgap effort as the U.S. works to build a national electronic health records system that can provide easy access to patient health information anywhere.
The flash drive, which costs members $5, does not contain a patient's entire health record, but it does hold emergency contacts, past hospitalizations (with the diagnoses and procedures performed), physicians and contact information, medical issues, immunization records, allergies, current medications, lab results for the past year, and readings and images from recent EKGs and chest X-rays.
"Having a patient's medical history, EKG and complete list of medications helps doctors provide superior medical care," said Dr. Robert Pearl, CEO of The Permanente Medical Group. "This flash drive can be carried anywhere around the world, and it allows a person to receive more rapid medical treatment whether they are on vacation or traveling on business."
The flash drive contains information also found on Kaiser's My Health Manager Web site, which allows members to manage their health care online, including e-mailing physicians, ordering prescriptions, changing or canceling appointments, and viewing lab test results.
According to Kaiser, more than 3 million of its members now use My Health Manager, mainly for secure e-mailing of doctors and clinicians and lab results. The company said each month its members sends more than 600,000 secure e-mails to doctors and clinicians, and more than 1.6 million lab test results are viewed online.
Kaiser first piloted the USB drive project last summer. Nearly 600 flash drives were handed out to members at its Oakland, Calif., medical center. Kaiser is now expanding that service to all of its members in northern California.
The data on the drive is encrypted and password-protected, and the data on it cannot be modified by the patient or the doctor. Instead, the information must be updated through a free service.
The USB drives are available through Kaiser's medical secretaries departments. When a member requests a USB drive, the medical data is downloaded to the drive from Kaiser's Electronic Medical Record while the patient waits. The patient then enters a password as the final step, before the drive is removed from the computer. It's all done while the patient is visiting a facility.
Kaiser is not the first company to use portable flash memory to store medical records. In 2004, Med-InfoChip LLC unveiled a mini USB thumb drive that could carry medical information for up to two patients in case of emergencies.
The MedicAlert Foundation, a nonprofit health care informatics organization, also offers its E-HealthKEY USB drive, which brings up critical medical data when plugged into a computer. It also allows users to carry a complete personal health record with them.



- Excel 2010 Cheat Sheet
- Register for this Computerworld Insider Cheat Sheet and gain access to hundreds of premium content articles, guides, product reviews and more.
- Datacenter Consolidation Best Practices Whitepaper
- The benefits of storage consolidation are being realized by companies and seen as a way to streamline many storage-driven applications. Learn why the...
- Eliminating VMware / Storage Related Performance Challenges
- How to proactively monitor the performance in a Fibre Channel SAN / vSphere environment is always a concern. Understand the importance of a...
- Cloud Environments Have Familiar Storage Challenges
- Cloud environments have many storage challenges that are familiar to data center managers, but due to their density and abstraction, the issues become...
- Eight Considerations for Evaluating Disk-Based Backup Solutions
- In the past, the movement from tape- to disk-based backup has been less compelling due to the expense of storing backup data on...
- ExaGrid Helps U.S. Federal Government Agencies Reduce Backup Windows and Improve Data Protection
- The U.S. Government has been the largest user of tape-based backup systems since the 1970s. Most agencies have begun to deploy disk storage... All Storage White Papers
- Understand Your Data: The Future of Backup and Archiving
- Archiving and Backup are the foundation of the next generation of information governance. However, commodity data protection tools and basic archives are only...
- Optimizing Networks for the Cloud
- Join guest speaker, Rohit Mehra, IDC Director of Enterprise Communications Infrastructure, to explore current trends, discuss best practices for optimizing Data Center and...
- Apps QuickStart Series Part 2: Designing and Deploying SQL Server on VMware vSphere
- Download this webcast to learn about the design considerations for virtualizing SQL workloads, performance and scalability information and high-availability options, as well as...
- Apps QuickStart Series Part 1: Designing and Deploying Exchange 2010 on VMware vSphere
- Download this webcast to learn the virtual hardware design considerations for Exchange 2010, deployment using the building block approach, options for high-availability and...
- Customer Spotlight: How IPC The Hospitalist Company Implemented Oracle on VMware
- Have you been looking to hear about customer's experiences with the new VMware vCenter Site Recovery Manager product? View this webcast to learn... All Storage Webcasts