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Nicolas P. Terry

Researcher at Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis

Publications -  88
Citations -  1325

Nicolas P. Terry is an academic researcher from Indiana University – Purdue University Indianapolis. The author has contributed to research in topics: Health care & Health law. The author has an hindex of 16, co-authored 87 publications receiving 1210 citations. Previous affiliations of Nicolas P. Terry include University of Tulsa & Saint Louis University.

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The Emergence of National Electronic Health Record Architectures in the United States and Australia: Models, Costs, and Questions

TL;DR: The article describes two national electronic health record models (currently developing in the United States and Australia) and one distributed, personal model and contrasts the US and Australian models in their different architectures and approaches to patient autonomy, privacy, and confidentiality.
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Ensuring the Privacy and Confidentiality of Electronic Health Records

TL;DR: In this article, the authors make specific technical and legal recommendations for protecting patients' medical information in a nationally based interoperable health records system, and explore the challenges to patient autonomy and professional responsibilities that must be addressed prior to implementation.
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Protecting Patient Privacy in the Age of Big Data

TL;DR: The essay suggests that the battle to preserve health privacy needs to be fought on three fronts: while HIPAA/HITECH provides increasingly robust protections against unauthorized uses of health information by a relatively narrow set of traditional health care provider data stewards, it does almost nothing to regulate the collection of health data.
Journal Article

Ensuring the privacy and confidentiality of electronic health records

TL;DR: In this paper, the authors argue that in order for a nationwide transition to electronic medical records to be successful, however, the system must receive acceptance from patients and physicians, and it must address and protect issues at the forefront of their concerns: namely, privacy and confidentiality.
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Education and debate: Regulating health information: a US perspective.

TL;DR: The American experience with private sector ehealth is an instructive model, even if some areas have been neglected and others over-regulated, and differences of opinion among medical professionals make the broad regulation of health advice difficult.