@article{2986081, title = "Assessing the prognoses on health care in the information society 2013 - Thirteen years after", author = "Knaup, P. and Ammenwerth, E. and Dujat, C. and Grant, A. and Hasman, A. and Hein, A. and Hochlehnert, A. and Kulikowski, C. and Mantas, J. and Maojo, V. and Marschollek, M. and Moura, L. and Plischke, M. and Röhrig, R. and Stausberg, J. and Takabayashi, K. and Ückert, F. and Winter, A. and Wolf, K.-H. and Haux, R.", journal = "Journal of Medical Systems", year = "2014", volume = "38", number = "7", publisher = "Springer New York LLC", issn = "0148-5598, 1573-689X", doi = "10.1007/s10916-014-0073-6", keywords = "article; economic development; electronic medical record; health care cost; health care management; health care organization; health care system; home monitoring; hospital care; human; information processing; information technology; medical informatics; medical information system; medical society; patient care; patient coding; telemedicine; workshop; attitude to health; health care delivery; health care personnel; home care; information system; interpersonal communication; organization and management; utilization, Communication; Delivery of Health Care; Health Knowledge, Attitudes, Practice; Health Personnel; Home Care Services; Humans; Information Systems; Medical Informatics; Telemedicine", abstract = "Health care and information technology in health care is advancing at tremendous speed. We analysed whether the prognoses by Haux et al. - first presented in 2000 and published in 2002 [1] - have been fulfilled in 2013 and which might be the reasons for match or mismatch. Twenty international experts in biomedical and health informatics met in May 2013 in a workshop to discuss match or mismatch of each of the 71 prognoses. After this meeting a web-based survey among workshop participants took place. Thirty-three prognoses were assessed matching; they reflect e.g. that there is good progress in storing patient data electronically in health care institutions. Twenty-three prognoses were assessed mismatching; they reflect e.g. that telemedicine and home monitoring as well as electronic exchange of patient data between institutions is not established as widespread as expected. Fifteen prognoses were assessed neither matching nor mismatching. ICT tools have considerably influenced health care in the last decade, but in many cases not as far as it was expected by Haux et al. in 2002. In most cases this is not a matter of the availability of technical solutions but of organizational and ethical issues. We need innovative and modern information system architectures which support multiple use of data for patient care as well as for research and reporting and which are able to integrate data from home monitoring into a patient centered health record. Since innovative technology is available the efficient and wide-spread use in health care has to be enabled by systematic information management. © 2014 Springer Science+Business Media New York." }