Bundestag approves e-prescriptions and e-patient files for everyone

by time news

2023-12-14 11:52:35

Electronic prescriptions and digital patient files are set to come into widespread everyday use after years of delays. This is provided for by a law from the traffic light coalition that the Bundestag passed on Thursday.

Accordingly, e-prescriptions should become standard and mandatory for practices at the beginning of 2024. At the beginning of 2025, all legally insured people should receive electronic files for health data such as findings and laboratory values ​​- unless they reject it. The use of combined health data for research should also be made possible in the future.

Lauterbach sees “quantum leap”

Federal Health Minister Karl Lauterbach (SPD) spoke of a quantum leap with which Germany must finally catch up with digitalization in the healthcare system. So far, important data has been distributed across the servers of practices and hospitals where patients have been treated in the past. “It can’t continue to be like this.” The new regulations would have a very concrete benefit for patients. The treatment options would be better for doctors.

According to the law, health insurance companies should set up an e-file for everyone with statutory health insurance by January 15, 2025 – unless you object. The file should be a personal data storage and accompany patients throughout their lives with all doctors. The e-file with certain identification rules should be accessible via cash register apps. It was introduced as an optional offer in 2021, but has hardly been used so far.

A comment from Christian Geinitz, Berlin Published/Updated: 45 minutes ago Recommendations: 1 Christian Geinitz, Berlin Published/Updated: Recommendations: 21 Sebastian Balzter Published/Updated: , Recommendations: 7

E-prescriptions have been available to be redeemed in pharmacies for some time now instead of the usual pink slips. The law now makes it mandatory for doctors to issue prescriptions electronically from January 1, 2024.

A second law is intended to make it possible to link data from various sources at a central access point – for example from cancer registries and health insurance companies. Data should be encrypted (pseudonymized). Lauterbach said this is a breakthrough for research to improve care.

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