On May 27, 2009, the California Council on Science and Technology convened, on behalf of the
State's Business, Transportation and Housing Agency (BT & H), the first formal meeting of a newly
formed Personalized Health Information Technology Task Force (PHIT). This meeting was an outcome of
several months of investigative work by a steering committee of PHIT Task Force members.
| We are interested in
exploring how to incorporate
personalized health
information in a manner that
can lead to... improved quality
of care while reducing health
costs. - Kathryn Lowell |
On September 19, 2008, BT & H convened a representative group of industry and academic leaders in
Personalized Health ("PH") from the public and private sectors. Meeting participants identified the
immediate need to inform the State of emerging risks, benefits and opportunities afforded by PH and
concluded California could lead the nation in PH policy as it has in climate change and energy.
Based on subsequent discussions, a "Moving Forward" implementation plan was proposed by CCST to
allow policymakers and implementers to make informed decisions. The study will be conducted by up to
three task forces, commencing with Task Force I on Personalized Health Information Technology. The
February 2009 passage of the federal American Recovery and Reinvestment (ARRA) legislation has
greatly increased federal funding available for Clinical Information Systems.
The
Personalized Health Information Technology Task Force (chaired by Dr. Ramesh Rao, California
Institute for Telecommunications and Information Technology, UCSD) is charged to propose HIT
infrastructure goals for the state in support of personalized health. Included in the Task Force
work is scoping of a pilot project involving building a model system incorporating many sources,
types and formats of data including genomic information, biomarkers, and images through one or more
partners and enabling information exchange through Electronic Health Records and Personal Health
Records within a private and secure system.
According to Kathryn Lowell, BT & H Deputy
Secretary for Health Systems and Life Sciences, "With the advancement in personal health records, we
are interested in exploring how to incorporate personalized health information in a manner that can
lead to better patient identification, health outcomes and improved quality of care while reducing
health care costs."
Task Force Chair Ramesh Rao noted, "The purpose of the pilot study is to recommend to the State's
Business Transportation and Housing Agency, the Health and Human Services Agency's Health
Information Exchange (HIE) workgroups, and the Privacy and Security Advisory Board (PSAB), processes
and means for validating and sharing (interinstitutional) information, tools and materials of
personalized health and for determining the potential value of Health Information Technology as
applied to personalized health care." The May 27th meeting purpose was to further define CCST
Convenes First Meeting of a Newly Formed Personalized Health Information Technology Task Force
objectives and scope of the pilot study.
Kathleen Behrens, keynote speaker at the February CCST meeting, commented that personalized
health "has the potential both to positively impact the increasing costs of healthcare and to
decrease the rate of new medical product development." Behrens served as a member of the President's
Council of Advisors on Science and Technology (PCAST) from 2001-2009, working on multiple national
policy matters. She chaired PCAST's Subcommittee on Personalized Medicine and led a two-year study
that culminated in the September 2008 report, Priorities for Personalized Medicine.