PRINCETON JUNCTION, N.J. – In an era of managed care, specialized medicine, mile-high paperwork, high costs, identity fraud and government demand for secure, portable and confidential patient information, the competitiveness of healthcare providers depends on the proper use of information technology. As a result, the healthcare industry is on the cusp of a move away from error-prone paper and ink toward a more secure electronic world.
A new white paper, Smart Card Applications in the U.S. Healthcare Industry, examines how smart card technology is being incorporated into new healthcare systems to protect and enable convenient access to patient data and support new applications that deliver clinical and administrative benefits.
“The use of smart cards in healthcare is gaining momentum. This white paper explains how its feature-rich, flexible platform provides a practical and portable way to enhance the security and confidentiality of patient information,” said Randy Vanderhoof, executive director of the Alliance. “In the long run, the data carried by smart health cards can not only save lives, but can also save the healthcare industry billions of dollars.”
The white paper describes the following benefits that smart cards provide in healthcare applications:
- Support privacy and security requirements mandated by HIPAA
- Provide the secure carrier for portable medical records
- Support new processes that can reduce administrative costs
- Reduce healthcare fraud
- Provide secure access to emergency medical information
- Provide support for patient loyalty programs
- Enable compliance with government initiatives and mandates
The white paper concludes with profiles of a number of organizations that are implementing smart cards, including the Queens Health Network, University of Pittsburgh Medical Center, St. Luke’s Episcopal Health System, Florida eLife-Card, Texas Medicaid, and the French and German health cards. The paper explains how these implementations illustrate the diversity of applications that are enabled by smart-card technology and the business benefits that the technology delivers to healthcare organizations.
Individuals from 24 organizations in the Smart Card Alliance Healthcare Council collaborated on this white paper. Lead contributors included representatives from ACI Worldwide, Axalto, Competech Smart Card Solutions, EMIDASI, Healthmeans, Hitachi America Ltd., Lockheed Martin, Oberthur Card Systems, OTI America, PrivaMed Inc., Sharp, TecSec, Uniliance Health, U.S. Dept. of Defense, VeriFone and Visa USA.
The white paper, written for executives and managers, is available at no charge from the Smart Card Alliance Web site at www.smartcardalliance.org.