Ontario is looking forward to creating a province-wide electronic medical record system for primary care, more than two decades after the government first started what became a scandal-plagued eHealth project.
Sylvia Jones, the health Minister announced Thursday that the province is commencing by talking to potential vendors about what is possible.
“(It’s asking) do you have the capacity to do this work? Show us what that would look like, and how do they talk together when we have multiple systems, whether, again it’s in hospitals, in labs, in physicians’ offices,” she said.
It will be a benefit both for patients and primary care providers, said Dr. Jane Philpott, chair of Ontario’s primary care action team and a family doctor by training.
“For example, if a patient ends up in the emergency department and their medical history isn’t readily available, it can create real challenges,” she said.
“Patients want and deserve for everyone in their circle of care to have a comprehensive view of their health information, their allergies, their medications, their vaccinations, test results, no matter where they were done. When that information is missing, it can not only lead to safety risks, but it can also lead to unnecessary repeat tests and delays in care.”
Most primary care providers are already using electronic records, but their systems are isolated, Jones said.
“What we need to do next is expand it so that those lab results, so that those hospital visits, so those conversations with Ontario Health at home and home care workers can all be part of that record, because, frankly, that is the entire person,” she said.
Government officials would not say what the cost estimate is ahead of the market sounding exercise.
Ontario began trying to create integrated electronic medical records for patients in the early 2000s, but in 2009 the then-Liberal health minister was forced to resign after the auditor general said the eHealth agency had spent $1 billion but had little to show for it. A followup report from the auditor general in 2016 said $8 billion had been spent to that point on various electronic health record initiatives.
Finance Minister Peter Bethlenfalvy also announced Thursday that next week’s provincial budget will include another $325 million for primary care, as Jones said the government is so far on track toward its goal of attaching everyone in the province to a primary care provider by 2029.
