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Dr. Marschall Runge, author of Coded to Kill Photo: Dr. Marschall Runge A new healthcare IT-focused thriller, written by a longtime health system leader, involves a hack into a national electronic health record system.

The novel, (Post Hill Press), is focused around two themes that can sometimes be at odds: maintaining patient privacy while driving toward nationwide interoperability. The characters at the fictional company developing the for-profit nationwide EHR are "susceptible to thinking it's better than it is," explained author, Dr. Marschall Runge, who serves as executive vice president for medical affairs for the University of Michigan, dean of the Medical School and CEO of the Michigan Medicine health system.



In , a technically feasible plot focuses on a cyber exploit that compromises patient privacy – to deadly results – at the fictional, North Carolina-based "Drexel Hospital." With the hospital's cutting-edge EHR about to "become the national standard," nefarious characters launch a plan to compromise its data in order to murder a politician. Meanwhile, other suspicious patient deaths keep occurring.

Runge told that he got the ideas for the book from real-life insider data breaches perpetrated by some employees working at the University of North Carolina more than a decade ago. "We were having all kinds of problems with people," he said. "Faculty and staff inappropriately accessing medical records.

" Runge said he had the task of speaking with faculty – and fou.

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