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Dans le secteur de la santé, les normes conflictuelles pour les TIC créent des problèmes d’interopérabilité entre les systèmes informatisés d’information sur la santé. Cette situation génère en outre des services de santé au coût inutilement élevé tout en entravant le développement de l’industrie. C’est ce qu’a conclu un rapport sur le développement en EU des services de santé en ligne.
The lack of interoperability in ICT systems and services in the healthcare sector, such as electronic health records, patient summaries and emergency data sets, has been identified as a major obstacle to the widespread take-up of eHealth applications in the EU.
The development of interoperable healthcare systems across the EU 27 was defined as one of the main priorities of the bloc's eHealth Action Plan
up to 2010.
A Commission Recommendation
on cross-border interoperability of electronic health record systems was adopted in July 2008. A large-scale EU pilot project, the Smart Open Services project (S.O.S.)
, was launched in July to test practical implementation.
The "right" e-health standards for specific applications and examples of their concrete use are also lacking, reveals the study
, requested by the European Commission.
As well as the current bleak situation, the report identified several stakeholder-specific barriers that are complicating the adoption of future e-health standards:
Meanwhile, the report underlines that "wide use of prominent ICT standards could impact positively on economic growth and competition and on the global competitiveness of manufacturers supplying ICT to the health sector".
Interoperable exchange of health information between healthcare organisations could also lead to "substantial" net savings for health service providers as well as improved service quality and streamlined health service processes, the authors said.
In order to overcome the barriers, the authors recommend starting with the identification, at EU-level, of priority standards for strategic e-Health systems and services and the promotion of their uptake. Afterwards, more specific standards could be developed and conflicting standards harmonised.