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- 2017
Secure Clinical Texting: Patient Risk in High-Acuity CareAbstract: The Joint Commission recently reversed its prior authorization of the use of secure clinical texting to issue patient care orders, now again prohibiting texting of orders. However, the potential sole or exclusive use of clinical texts to transmit other patient care information beyond care orders still poses a risk to patient safety in high acuity care because of text transmission delays resulting from carrier-dependent latency. Although texting in routine patient care may deliver high value to clinicians, the risk of latency and delayed receipt of clinically urgent or time-sensitive texted patient information in high-acuity care settings can harm patients. We completed a review of 19 secure clinical text vendor websites, finding that 16 of 19 (84 percent) market their products for use specifically in high-acuity and critical patient care. The secure clinical texting industry needs the policy guidance of The Joint Commission and health information technology professionals to minimize risk to patients, clinicians, and hospital systems as secure clinical texting becomes standard accepted practice
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