BIDMC has been offering Personal Health Records since 1999 and we've learned that patient information must be organized appropriately and wrapped in patient education materials so that the data is transformed into knowledge, and is actionable.
I recently visited my PCP for an annual physical. Ok, to be honest it was my first visit in 4 years since as a physician I am uniquely poor at seeking regular preventative/wellness care. My PCP ordered a Urinalysis, a metabolic panel, lipids, and a CBC from Quest. Quest has a very cool feature that enables patients to upload their lab results into Microsoft Healthvault and Google Health.
Google does a technically elegant but less than useful thing - a list of test names and values in alphabetical order that mixes my urine, chemistry, microbiology, and hematology tests together randomly. You cannot even tell what is a blood result and what is a urine result. There are no educational materials.
Microsoft organizes the results by panel, which is great. Although at times, healthcare data should be organized into attribute-value pairs for mining and analysis, presentation to patients requires persistence of the original format of the lab panels as they were ordered. Microsoft wisely recognizes this. The only improvement would be to include educational materials for each test.
Ideally, after viewing labs, patients should be able to ask their clinicians questions, schedule an appointment, or seek a referral online. Since most stand-alone Personal Health Records do not include integration into clinician office workflows, patients tend to prefer Personal Health Records that are directly linked to the EHR of their providers, such as those offered by Epic (MyChart), eClinicalWorks (Patient Portal), and self-built provider systems (BIDMC's Patientsite, Partners' Patient Gateway).
If we're going to change the culture so that patients demand personal health records and stewardship of their own data, we need to make the tools usable!