The app offers new access from a mobile device, but the patient information database still needs an urgent upgrade.
After a yearâs delay â and with very little fanfare â the Australian Digital Health Agency (ADHA) has finally released the My Health Record mobile app.
The app, called âmy healthâ, or âmy health govâ on the App Store, gives holders of a My Health Record account full access to their details via a mobile device, although they canât currently add information through the app.
Despite the late launch, the Albanese government has already flagged a key role for an upgraded My Health Record in healthcare reform.
In releasing the Strengthening Medicare Taskforce report last month, Health Minister Mark Butler acknowledged My Health Record was âpretty outdatedâ and âclunkyâ and needed significant modernisation if it was to be at the heart of Australiaâs patient digital data strategy.
The taskforce called for significant improvements to patient information, with a recommendation to âmodernise My Health Record to significantly increase the health information available to individuals and their health care professionals, including by requiring âsharing by defaultâ for private and public practitioners and services, and make it easier for people and their health care teams to use at the point of careâ.
There were also recommendations to âprovide an uplift in primary care IT infrastructure, and education and support to primary care practices including comparative feedback on their practice, so that they can maximise the benefits of data and digital reforms, mitigate risks and undertake continuous quality improvementâ.
According to the ADHA, consumer views of My Health Record increased by 292% in the last financial year, while around 75% of interactions between the system and users occurred on mobile devices.
âThe co-design approach for the âmy healthâ app has been at the core of its development,â the agency said in a statement. âIt will continue to drive change and improvement to the app over time so that it responds to the needs of all Australians.â
The taskforce report also called for it to be made easier for Australians to âaccess, manage, understand and share their own health information and find the right care to keep them healthy for longer through strengthened digital health literacy and navigationâ.
âCritical patient health information remains locked in siloed clinical information systems and cannot be shared easily across the health system and care settings,â the report said. âEven where information sharing is possible, it is not always happening as often as it should be. These issues must be addressed as poor information flows lead to increased cost and worse patient outcomes.
âWe need to continue to invest in infrastructure that improves interoperability between systems, simplifies and streamlines data sharing and access, helps improve the security and resilience of the whole health system, and accelerates progress towards a consumer driven health system.â
My Health Record has to date been accessible via the myGov website as well as through some third-party apps, such as Healthdirect.
While the new mobile option allows consumers to view their record, health information, such as details of allergies or emergency contact details, needs to be added through their myGov account. It should then show in the app.
Authorised representatives or a nominated representative for a patient, such as a carer, can access the patientâs health information via their own log-in to the app.
When a My Health Record is created for a child, one or both parents are usually set up as an authorised representative. Parents can then access their childâs health information through the app using their log-in.
The app requires users to set up a six-digit PIN, which can be changed from the account page of the app. Patients are automatically logged out of the app if they havenât used it for five minutes.