Skip to main content

Military Health System

Test of Sitewide Banner

This is a test of the sitewide banner capability. In the case of an emergency, site visitors would be able to visit the news page for addition information.

MHS GENESIS Patient Portal expands new features

Image of Military health personnel wearing a face mask looking at a computer screen. Navy hospital corpsmen assigned to Naval Hospital Bremerton/Navy Medicine Readiness and Training Command in Bremerton, Washington, securely connected with prospective patients on upcoming appointments using the Department of Defense electronic health record MHS Genesis patient portal in December 2020 (Photo by: Douglas Stutz, Naval Hospital Bremerton/Navy Medicine Readiness and Training Command Public Affairs).

MHS GENESIS' patient portal is rapidly increasing in size, capability, and usability.

Features gaining in popularity include a health library, provided by corporate partner Healthwise, said Air Force Lt. Col. John DaLomba, solution owner for the MHS GENESIS patient portal, at the Defense Health Agency (DHA) in Falls Church, Virginia.

"People can look up pretty much anything that they want" such as knee pain or diabetes, he said. "It's really quite good, and quite extensive."

But the portal's "best feature, in my opinion, is the secure messaging," said DaLomba, who is also an occupational therapist. "You can exchange secure information with your provider or provider's team, and all the communication takes place within the electronic health record program. You have exactly what was conveyed - there's no opportunity to misconstrue what was typed in."

Older MHS GENESIS communication systems were limited to a member's primary care physician. The new portal system allows communication with an empaneled provider or specialty clinic and their teams of professionals with authorized access. That last part is important so that communications go to a "message pool," and don't just sit unopened in an inbox if a provider is unavailable.

The tool allows communication with certain civilian health care professionals, too, and decreases the need to use a fax machine, DaLomba said. He added that there are more new features coming for the patient portal but couldn't give an exact timeline because of the need to work out licensing and acquisition periods.

Meanwhile there is an online scheduling capability for primary care physicians, and patients have the opportunity to view (and print) a lot of information from visit summaries and clinical notes, DaLomba said. Tests and measurements can also be viewed, though there is a built-in 36-hour delay for radiology and lab results, enabling doctors to view the results and prepare to communicate what they mean to the patient, particularly if there is an issue to discuss. For COVID-19 testing results, however, this delay has been removed.

DaLomba has used the MHS patient portal as a provider as recently as last year when he came to the DHA. And he had plenty of experience with the Military Heath System's legacy documentation efforts - two separate systems for inpatient and outpatient records. MHS GENESIS, which he started using at Travis Air Force Base in California in September 2019, incorporates both.

"It was a big change for everybody to get used to," he said. "Were there challenges? Of course there were. We were trained and there was plenty of support available. But it went well."

MHS GENESIS has been rolling out in waves around the military; eventually the entire MHS will transition from the legacy platforms. "It's a very complex deployment schedule, and it's mapped out through the next several years," DaLomba said. The first wave came in 2017, at sites in the Pacific Northwest.

Military health personnel looking at a laptop computer screen
Navy Cmdr. (Dr.) Catherine Soteras (right), Department Head for the Main Operating Room, Directorate of Surgical Services at Naval Hospital Twentynine Palms, California, during MHS Genesis mock “go-live” training in September 2020 (Photo by: David Marks, Naval Hospital Twentynine Palms).

E-visits

Another feature on the patient portal is a COVID-19 "e-visit," a structured, secure screening initiated by patients, which includes a questionnaire that uses "branching logic" (a method that creates a custom pathway in a survey, based on a user's responses). DaLomba noted it also creates a "disposition" for the patient, letting them know if they should report to the emergency room, contact their primary care physician, or take lesser measures.

A report generated by the e-visit is sent to the physician and the team viewing such reports, and a COVID-19 test might then be recommended.

That feature was added early in April 2020, and "has gotten really good utilization," DaLomba said, adding there have been about 4,000 such e-visits. "It was designed to assist, and ... to decrease the number of people traveling to the military (medical) treatment facility (MTF)."

Further, that tool made it possible to make changes to the pharmacy prescription activation process. A visit to a typical military pharmacy involves a two-step process to get medications. First, you check into the pharmacy to "activate" your prescription, and only then is the prescription filled. But with COVID-19, many pharmacies adopted a phone activation process to decrease foot traffic, DaLomba explained. From there, a new secure message tool for online activation was developed (also in spring 2020) for the patient portal, though not all pharmacies have adopted this feature.

Another implement in the patient portal kit bag that's coming: an online clipboard, that will enable the MTF staff to send certain paperwork to a patient to fill out before an appointment, which could include a health history, a questionnaire, a behavioral health checklist.

The patient portal, though mobile friendly for iOS and Android, does not yet have an app to accompany it. DaLomba said an app is under discussion at the moment.

The improvements come on the heels of MHS GENESIS's new "MassVax" program, a large digital record of COVID-19 vaccinations administered to service members and their families that will more accurately track and ensure that the Department of Defense patient population has received COVID-19 vaccinations.

You also may be interested in...

MHS GENESIS: Commanders Say Electronic Health Records Foster Improved Care

Article
4/20/2022
An Army soldier and patient actor sports a mock impalement while providing simulated medical information to test out a new electronic medical record system designed to virtually document medical encounters in the field. The mock scenario was part of the U.S. Navy’s Rim of the Pacific exercise in 2018. (Photo: Ana Allen, U.S. Army)

MHS GENESIS improves health care for military beneficiaries across the enterprise.

MHS GENESIS Now Deployed at 66 of 138 Military Hospital and Clinic Commands

Article
4/8/2022
Air Force Col. Dolphis Hall, 4th Medical Group commander, left, and Chief Master Sgt. Kaleah Belin, 4th MDG senior enlisted leader, pose for a photo at the Thomas Koritz Medical Clinic at Seymour Johnson Air Force Base, North Carolina, March 19, 2022. (Photo: Air Force Senior Airman Kimberly Barrera)

MHS GENESIS is now live at Waves Bragg and Wave Hood.

How Health IT Upgrades are Transforming the Military Health System

Article
4/5/2022
Dr. Barclay Butler, the Defense Health Agency’s assistant director of management, spoke at the annual Health Information Management Systems Society conference in Orlando, Florida, in March. (Photo: Claire Reznicek, MHS Communications)

Implementing an Electronic Health Record system is key to modernizing the Military Health System’s patient care.

New Electronic Health Record Rollout Will Hit Major Milestone in 2022

Article
1/12/2022
Elaine Sanchez explores the new MHS GENESIS Patient Portal at Brooke Army Medical Center, Joint Base San Antonio-Fort Sam Houston, Texas, Oct. 6, 2021. The San Antonio Market will transition to the new electronic health record system – known as MHS GENESIS – in January 2022.

Despite the hardships, 2021 was a year of great achievements for DHA, including the successful rollout of the new electronic health record MHS GENESIS.

How Standing Up Regional Markets is Improving Access to Health Care

Article
1/11/2022
Air Force Maj. Megan George, a registered nurse assigned to the 633d Medical Group based at Joint Base Langley-Eustis, Virginia, retrieves medical supplies from a storeroom at Hennepin Healthcare in Minneapolis, Minnesota during COVID-19 response operations, Dec. 7. The DHA has seen early success in replacing deployed personnel in their assigned markets (Photo by Navy Petty Officer 2nd Class Michael H. Lehman).

Modernizations set in motion in 2021 will optimize care and sharing of medical resources across services and the entire MHS, says U.S. Public Health Service Capt. Tracy Farrill.

Ask the Doc: What is the Patient Portal and What Does it Mean to Me?

Article
1/5/2022
Chief nursing information officer in-processing trainees into MHS GENESIS.

Doc asks Air Force Lt. Col. John DaLomba, Health Informatics team lead and solution owner for the MHS GENESIS Patient Portal, what the new Patient Portal means for MHS beneficiaries.

'Open Notes' Approach Builds Stronger Provider-Patient Relationships

Article
1/4/2022
Open notes offer many evidence-based advantages through mutual communication, understanding, and collaboration.

'Open notes' enable two-way communication and feedback that encourages providers and patients to feel that they are not just on the same page, but in the same boat on a shared journey.

Future Patient Health Education Portal Will Be “Source of Truth”

Article
11/16/2021
Military personnel typing on a computer

DHA is prototyping a Virtual Education Center solution to provide vetted patient information in an easily accessible online resource, aimed at providing quick and consistent answers to questions that inevitably arise between medical appointments.

MHS GENESIS ‘Super Users’ Fuel MTF Transformations

Article
10/26/2021
Military personnel cutting the cord during the system's launch

The MHS GENESIS Super User is the fuel that drives our MTFs’ organizational transformation.

Yes, You Can Still Get Old Medical Records after MHS GENESIS Transition

Article
10/1/2021
Image of the back of a man scanning IT equioment

As the Military Health System rolls out a standardized electronic health record, MHS GENESIS, across all Defense Health Agency-managed military medical treatment facilities, legacy patient records are kept in the Joint Longitudinal Viewer application.

MHS GENESIS: Coming Soon to a Hawaii MTF Near You

Article
9/24/2021
A naval doctor works on the new MHS GENESIS EHR.

Wave TRIPLER to go-live in Hawaii.

Coast Guard launches electronic health record system in Pacific Area

Article
9/3/2021
Coast Guard medical personnel using MHS GENESIS

U.S. Coast Guard launches electronic health record system in Pacific Area, and moves from paper records to a new EHR.

Federal leaders highlight electronic health record changes at HIMSS

Article
8/31/2021
Federal leaders being interviewed

The new Federal electronic health record delivers data to healthcare teams wherever a patient receives treatment.

How COVID-19 fast-tracked innovation in the Military Health System

Article
7/20/2021
Military personnel receiving the COVID-19 test

As the COVID-19 pandemic disrupted every aspect of healthcare delivery, the Military Health System responded with new and innovative ways to fight the disease and deliver safe, quality care to patients.

Innovation working group strives to enhance METC training

Article
7/20/2021
Military personnel using virtual reality

Virtual/augmented reality, 3D printing, video/podcast production, and machine learning/artificial intelligence technologies and others like them will enhance the training students receive at METC and elsewhere by supplementing the lectures and providing realistic alternatives to actual experiences.

Page 2 of 4 , showing items 16 - 30
First < 1 2 3 4 > Last 
Refine your search
Last Updated: December 29, 2022
Follow us on Instagram Follow us on LinkedIn Follow us on Facebook Follow us on Twitter Follow us on YouTube Sign up on GovDelivery