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... to tedious administrative task where it requires patient records to be filled manually. The advent of EMR facilitates proper ... patient health record maintenance. But this case is entirely different while using electronic medical records.
Feeding the patient data into paper records ... legal accusations, claims and loss of patients’ medical treatment payments to hospitals and insurance companies. ...
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... government is investing billions of dollars into the technology.
Very few physicians use electronic record systems effectively. For instance, many are simply scanning paper records into a computer, which provides minimal benefit. It’s difficult to track ... up!
Related posts:How the widespread adoption of electronic medical records can raise health care costsFunding electronic ...
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... the research is officially published, and there is no indication of when that will happen.) This is not to say that electronic medical records aren't the future of health care--clearly, they ... computing could benefit from some comparative
effectiveness research. Normally used for comparing medical treatments to establish which ones are the most efficient, the same type of research could help ...
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... ’re talking a Manhattan Project with savings (if any) far down the road)
A nationwide electronic medical records system represents the largest and most complex IT project in history.
... of thousands service and equipment providers, over 300 million patients with more than a billion records.
There are no data standards currently defined.
There are no security protocols in place.
Much of ...
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“In little more than five years, electronic medical records (EMRs) will be required by the federal government, and if the experience of local health care providers that already use such systems is any indication, the transition is likely to be bumpy.
Electronic medical records are large, complex systems that must be easy to use yet secure,
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The Healthcare Reform Program is by far the most debated and controversial issue confronting the Obama Administration. Much attention thus far has been focused on the Electronic Medical Records (EMR) system. Most healthcare practitioners seem to agree that computerised medical information at hospitals, doctors’ offices and all other healthcare institutes would lead to reduced waste,
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"We analyzed whether more computerized hospitals had lower costs of care or administration, or better quality," the authors wrote.
The results: "Hospitals on the ‘Most Wired' list performed no better than others on quality, costs, or administrative costs."
Himmelstein's study is the second this week that disputes the benefits of EMR.
via healthleadersmedia. ...
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... physicians’ offices and hospitals that use GE’s electronic medical record (EMR) system. The data is ... then uploaded to a database used by GE Healthcare’s Medical Quality Improvement Consortium (MQIC), a group of ... signed a consent form or waiver to allow their medical data to be used in this way? I wonder if any of them even realize their medical data is being passed around with 3rd ...
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Prodded by federal stimulus money, General Electric Co. (NYSE:GE) is joining the effort to move the medical industry from paper records to computer databases.
GE Healthcare Ltd. has launched an eHealth business, based in Boston, as part of its existing medical information technologies group, based in Illinois....
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A study comparing performance of hospitals at different levels of electronic record implementation findsthat I could file for divorce delivers at best a very small quality of care benefit or a reduction in hospital stay time. The nation is set to begin an ambitious program, backed by $19 billion in government incentives, to accelerate the adoption of computerized patient records...
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