Search This Blog

Saturday, April 11, 2026

'Medicare Debuts Digital Health Record System for Enrollees'

 Medicare enrollees will soon be able to export their medical records to their doctor or hospital under a program launched Thursday by CMS.

"Right now, our health information still feels stuck in the past," Amy Gleason, acting administrator of the Department of Government Efficiency and a senior advisor at HHS, said in a press conference with reporters. "It's really frustrating when you walk into your doctor's office and they hand you a clipboard for you to recount every part of your medical history, sometimes when you've given that dozens of times before, maybe even at the same office, and especially after we've had 20 years of interoperability work. It's really frustrating to have that still happening."

"So last July, we announced what we call the Health Tech Ecosystem at the White House, and we have 60 companies that signed up to pledge to come and work alongside of us and to deliver solutions in 6 months to a year," she continued. "So this is our first real milestone in this work, and so we have practices here, like Cleveland Clinic, Tennessee Oncology, and AtlantiCare, that are now live."

The system allows patients to use an app on their phone that creates a QR code which allows them to share their medical records straight to the provider, "and it goes straight into their electronic health record," she said. In order to share the record, the patient first uses an existing identification app -- such as login.gov, id.me, or CLEAR -- to authenticate themselves.

Asked by MedPage Today how this system compares with a universal patient identifier that would give all doctors access to a single patient electronic health record, Gleason said, "That's actually the whole idea, is that when Hospital X doesn't have your records, now you will have them and be able to share them directly with the hospital ... We're not rolling out any kind of national identifier -- that's not part of this process -- but we did put modern identity into the program so patients can use something like login.gov, or id.me, or CLEAR on the Medicare website to be able to log in." Patients use apps on a new Medicare App Library to create the QR code and transmit their records.

Gleason also was asked about how secure such a system would be and what protections there would be against hacking. "The apps that we will highlight in our Medicare App Library go through a certification process" and must agree to abide by the CARIN Code of Conduct, which is "basically a framework that people have agreed to as an industry to put privacy policy and data use terms in an easy-to-understand, usable [format], not like in a long, scrollable document that nobody reads, but in the workflow, and to default things to be private, so that patients, by nature, are protected."

Another question was raised regarding whether patients' information could be used for artificial intelligence (AI) training. All participating companies have agreed to put their AI in a separate, private space and that they will not steal patient records or use them for AI training, Gleason said. In addition, "part of the CARIN code of conduct, is they can't sell the data. That's all part of that framework that we put in place for privacy and security."

Shortly after the press conference, participating companies gathered in the Great Hall at HHS headquarters to hear speeches from agency officials and see demonstrations of some of the app library software. "Your work across industry and government to give patients personalized healthcare is central to our promise to make America healthy again," said HHS Secretary Robert F. Kennedy Jr. In addition to transferring health records, patients also will be able to use AI and, based on their own health data from their medical record and wearables, "make better food choices and better healthcare choices," he said.

CMS Administrator Mehmet Oz, MD, MBA, pointed out that "technology [doesn't] work as well in healthcare as in other sectors ... You're giving patients access to something they have always owned because they paid for it -- their data -- and allowing that data to be exchanged in a more cohesive fashion."

FDA Commissioner Marty Makary, MD, MPH, said that his agency recently announced draft guidance that "makes it clear when the FDA needs to approve software and when we need to just get out of the way -- that certainly enables developers to move quickly or to invest. Investors like predictability, patients like predictability, and scientists like predictability."

In addition, the FDA is also looking at cybersecurity for new software, he said. "When we think about new technology, we get excited, but at the FDA, the first thought we have is safeguarding the public. And so that's why we're developing very, very strong criteria to ensure optimizing cybersecurity."

https://www.medpagetoday.com/practicemanagement/informationtechnology/120746

Iran delegation leaves Islamabad after talks end without deal

 

Iran delegation leaves Islamabad after talks end without deal

Iran’s delegation left Islamabad for Tehran after talks with the United States ended without agreement, Iranian media reported on Sunday.

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-04-12/japan-to-work-with-asian-nations-to-ease-oil-bottleneck-akazawa

https://www.bloomberg.com/news/articles/2026-04-12/malaysia-faces-critical-period-for-fuel-by-june-minister-says

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Iran-also-said-to-be-against-continuing-negotiations/66050115

https://breakingthenews.net/Article/Vance:-Iran-decided-not-to-accept-US-terms/66050079

New Iran Leadership More Extreme, Israeli Intelligence Concludes

 In what should not at all be a surprise to anyone who has been awake and observant over the past 20+ years of America's military interventions in the Middle East, the Israeli Army and intelligence officials have concluded that Iran's news leadership is more extreme than the previous one.

The IDF delivered a closed-door intelligence briefing to the Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee on Thursday, which involved presenting this finding, according to The Times of Israel.

via Majlis

Iran's new leadership consists of members of the elite Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps (IRGC) which are now frequently described as far more ideologically rigid than the former political leadership - a development which was entirely predictable.

The slain Ayatollah Ali Khamenei's son Mojtaba has not been seen in public since the US-Israeli attacks began, but he is also said to be hardline than his father. And of course, this current crop of leaders have either lost family or been wounded in the strikes - giving them more incentive to take a rigid stance against Washington.

Still, NeoCon warmongers have been at times repeating old Iraq war, Bush era talking points of "they will greet us as liberators"

This certainly didn't happen in either Iraq or Afghanistan, and in the latter country the Taliban is now in complete control despite a more than two-decade long US coalition occupation and quagmire. America's 'nation-building' only produced a failed state followed by greater Taliban ascendancy and control.

In many cases, the very same officials advocating for regime change in Iran were on board with all the foreign policy failures of the past, also including Syrian and Libya.

The Trump administration itself in the opening days of the bombing campaign acted as if suddenly masses of people would rise up and overthrow the Islamic Republic and its long-standing institutions.

Yet the government has not fallen, and still President Trump has lately claimed that Iran's losses of dozens of senior civilian and military leaders is tantamount to "regime change". This has not changed facts on the ground.

Vice President JD Vance traveled Friday to Pakistan for high-level talks with Iranian officials, and reports say that some 70 Iranians are traveling with the Tehran team to present a 'unified front'. Talks are expected into Sunday, and they entered with contrasting demands which appear very far apart.

https://www.zerohedge.com/geopolitical/new-iran-leadership-more-extreme-israeli-intelligence-concludes