Patients commonly interact with multiple healthcare providers and organisations across numerous locations. Efficient communication between all parties involved in a patient’s care is critical to ensure the delivery of high quality, effective and safe healthcare.
When exchanging sensitive patient information, it needs to be done in a way that is safe, secure and efficient. The RACGP Standards for General Practices 5th edition (the Standards) (Criterion C6.3) requires practices to transfer relevant patient health information in a timely, authorised, and secure manner. There are no mandatory requirements in the Standards about how this information should be transferred but the RACGP has long advocated for interoperability between different clinical information systems (CIS) to enable secure message delivery because it is the safest, most secure and efficient method of communication available.
Secure messaging enables healthcare providers to send information via their clinical information system to the receiving provider or through one or more secure messaging systems.
In order to send and receive secure messages, your practice will need to have a conformant clinical information system and be registered with one or more secure messaging providers. Once a secure message is created, it is encrypted and sent through the sender’s secure messaging system to the receiver’s secure messaging system, de-crypted and passed on to the receiver’s clinical information system.
More than 90% of general practices utilise secure messaging systems and most other specialists and healthcare organisations have secure messaging capability. There are some simple steps you can take to start using secure messaging, starting with contacting your preferred specialists and contacts to find out which secure messaging systems they use. You may already be using the same secure messaging software, or you can arrange for a free trial of their system/s to securely exchange documents.
Once you have selected the secure messaging product that meets your needs, you would then configure your software address book to quickly look up your contacts, train your staff on how to use secure messaging and notify your key contacts of your secure messaging identifier.
These systems are widely underutilised, especially for outbound communications. Despite the considerable efforts of professional bodies, government agencies and industry, interoperability between CIS has not yet been achieved.
The RACGP is continuing to advocate for secure electronic communications and has provided recommendations to the Healthcare Interoperability Plan and the National Digital Health Strategy to establish clear regulations to drive the necessary changes required for widespread adoption of interoperability across the health sector. Secure communications also need to be supported by high quality, searchable directories containing healthcare provider information which must be maintained and kept up to date.